This invention relates to a remote fastener supply system and, more particularly, to a remote fastener presenter that orients a rivet for presentation to a rivet tool.
In a fastening operation, such as one including two work pieces that are to be fastened by a riveting operation, an operator uses a rivet tool to fasten the work pieces together with a rivet. Traditionally, the rivet tool receives one rivet at a time into a nosepiece, which requires the operator to load another rivet after the first has been fastened. Manual loading of the rivets into the nosepiece may present opportunities for misalignment of the rivet, inconvenience to the operator, and may not allow the operator to align and hold the work pieces while loading a rivet during fastening operations.
Various conventional systems present rivets to a riveting tool. In one such conventional system, the rivet is positioned in axial alignment with the nosepiece of the rivet tool a distance from the nosepiece. A vacuum or positive air pressure sucks or blows, respectively, the rivet into the nosepiece across the distance. The travel of the rivet over the distance may lead to misalignment of the rivet in the nosepiece and if the mandrel of the nosepiece is burred or bent, failure of the rivet to load into the nosepiece.
Another conventional rivet presenting device is activated when the nosepiece of the rivet tool is inserted into a receiving aperture of the presenting device. A rivet travels mandrel end first through a hose from a remote storage to the presenting device. A vacuum in the nosepiece of the rivet tool sucks the mandrel of the rivet from the device into the nosepiece. The rivet tool is removed from the receiving aperture with the rivet positioned for fastening. A rivet presented in this conventional arrangement may have several disadvantages, including bent or burred rivet mandrels that snag in the tube because the rivets travel through the tube mandrel end first, causing clogs in the tube.
Accordingly, it is desirable to provide a remote fastener presenter that provides a consistent proper orientation of a rivet for presentation to a rivet tool while minimizing the potential for clogging.
The remote rivet presenter according to the present invention communicates with a fastener storage module by a feed tube assembly, which delivers a fastener from the fastener storage module to the remote fastener presenter for loading into the fastening tool. The fastening presenter reorients the fastener from a first orientation to a second orientation relative to a fastener transport axis for loading into the fastening tool.
In one fastener presenter, the fastener storage module blows a rivet through a feed tube and into a translating module. The translating module includes a drum with a nest portion that receives the rivet. The rivet arrives in the nest portion in a first orientation relative to the fastener transport axis. A vacuum holds the rivet in the nest portion and a control system monitors the vacuum level. The control system commands an actuator to rotate the drum. Rotation of the drum orients the rivet to a second orientation approximately 180° different from the first orientation. A nosepiece of a rivet tool partially encapsulates a mandrel of the rivet. A positive air pressure blows the mandrel up into the nosepiece, where it is held by a vacuum supplied through the rivet tool.
In another fastener presenter, a toothed rack translates in and out of a slot of the translating module and engages a drive sprocket that is axially engaged with the translating module. The nosepiece of the rivet tool actuates the toothed rack when inserted into the receptacle portion. The toothed rack translates into the slot and actuates a drive sprocket against the bias of a spring member, thereby rotating the translating module.
In another fastener presenter, the translating module includes a cylinder with a nest portion that receives the rivet. The rivet arrives in the rotating cylinder in a first orientation relative to a fastener transport axis. The control system commands an actuator to rotate the cylinder. Rotation of the cylinder orients the rivet to a second orientation approximately 180° different from the first orientation. The control system then commands an air/vacuum module to supply air to a chamber, thereby axially displacing the piston and translating the rivet towards the receptacle portion. A vacuum generated through the nosepiece of the rivet tool sucks the rivet into the nosepiece.
The remote fastener presenter according to the present invention orients a fastener between a first orientation and a second orientation that is appropriate for loading into a fastening tool.
The various features and advantages of this invention will become apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of the currently preferred embodiment. The drawings that accompany the detailed description can be briefly described as follows.
FIGS. 5A-C shows a schematic top view of a remote fastener presenter orienting a rivet;
FIGS. 8A-C shows a schematic top view of a remote fastener presenter including a cylinder.
The feed tube assembly 20 allows the remote fastening presenter 16 to be located remotely from the fastener storage module 18, thereby increasing the useable workspace at the site of a fastening operation without having the fastener storage module 18 consuming space at the site. The human operator 12 may also portably carry the remote fastener presenter 16 from one fastening operation to another fastening operation. The fastener storage module 18 is in a fixed location; however, the human operator 12, tethered only by the feed tube assembly 20, may move from one fastening operation to another.
The fastener storage module 18 includes three sub-modules 22A, 22B, 22C that cooperate to supply a fastener to the feed tube assembly 20. The sub-module 22A preferably controls the function of the fastener storage module 18, communicates with the remote fastening presenter 16, and communicates with other fastener storage modules that may be used in conjunction with the fastener storage module 18. The sub-module 22B controls an air supply module 24 for the feed tube assembly 20. The sub-module 22C is a feeding module that may include, for example, a vibratory feeding bowl 26A, feed tracks (not shown), and at least one escapement 26B for removing individual fasteners from the vibratory feeding bowl 26A and a bulk feeder 26C. It is to be understood that the remote fastening presenter 16 can utilize other configurations of the fastener storage module 18.
The fastener storage module 18 supplies fasteners to the feed tube assembly 20, which includes a feed tube 28, an air supply tube 29, and electrical communication 31 between the sub-module 22A and the remote fastening presenter 16. A fastener is driven through the feed tube 28 by transport air from the air supply tube 29 and air supply module 24 to the remote fastening presenter 16.
The fastener presenting system 10 may include one or more additional remote fastening presenters 16′ for providing multiple fasteners to a fastening tool 14 that has multiple heads and/or multiple operators. An additional feed tube assembly 20′ provides the additional remote fastening presenter 16′ with fasteners from the fastener storage module 18 or additional fastener storage module.
The fastener may be a standard type of rivet 30, as shown in
The translating module 46 includes a drum 64 and drum cover 66 which may be transparent to allow the human operator 12 to view a nest portion 68 (also illustrated in
A vacuum/air connection 70 on the housing 42 connects to a vacuum/air supply module 72 by a tube 74. The vacuum/air supply module 72 generates a vacuum or supplies air to the vacuum/air channel 76 in response to commands from the control system 58. The vacuum/air channel 76 is in fluid communication with the nest portion 68.
The control system 58 (
As illustrated in
In response to the LED/reset indicator 62, the human operator 12 inserts a nosepiece 96 of a rivet tool 98 into the receptacle portion 60. The nosepiece 96 depresses a set of locking pins 100 located inside of the receptacle portion 60. The set of locking pins 100 guides the nosepiece 96 in the receptacle portion 60 and secures the nosepiece 96 in a ready position to receive the rivet 30. The nosepiece 96 extends into the nest portion 68 to at least partially encapsulate the mandrel 32 of the rivet 30 (
A photo-eye sensor 102A located in the receptacle portion 60 and rivet tool sensor 102B located upstream from the photo-eye sensor 102A sense the presence of the rivet tool 98 and signal the control system 58. The rivet tool sensor 102B senses that the human operator 12 has inserted the rivet tool 98 into the receptacle portion 60 and the photo-eye sensor 102A senses that the nosepiece 96 is in position to receive the rivet mandrel 32. The control system 58, detecting insertion of the nosepiece 96 for loading of the rivet 30, commands the vacuum supplied through the vacuum/air channel 76 to cease and triggers a positive air pressure in the vacuum/air channel 76 for approximately 500 ms. The positive air pressure blows the mandrel 32 up into the nosepiece 96, where it is held by a vacuum supplied through the rivet tool 98.
The photo-eye sensor 102A and rivet tool sensor 102B also sense the removal of the rivet tool 98 and signal the control system 58, which commands the actuator 86 to rotate the drum 64 to the rivet receiving position (
The control system 58 of the remote fastening presenter 16 verifies the position of the rivet 30 or other fastener during the delivery sequence. Improper delivery of the rivet 30 to the nest portion 68 or improper seating of the rivet 30 in the nest portion 68 does not increase the vacuum pressure level in the nest portion 68. When the control system 58 fails to detect a predetermined increase amount in the vacuum pressure level in the nest portion 68 within a predetermined time limit, the control system 58 shuts off the actuator 86. Also, when the control system 58 does not detect that the drum 64 has rotated, the control system 58 shuts off the actuator 86. These fail-safe controls allow the human operator 12 to diagnose and clear the problem. It is to be understood that other fault conditions may alternatively or additionally be provided.
The control system 58 commands the fastener storage module 18 to deliver the rivet 30. The fastener storage module 18 blows the rivet 30 through the feed tube 28, through the fastener ingress 44, and into the nest portion 140. The rivet 30 arrives in the nest portion 140 in a first orientation relative to the fastener transport axis 138, which is mandrel 32 first.
After a predetermined time delay of one second from the delivery command to the fastener storage module 18, the control system 58 signals acquisition of the rivet 30 in the nest portion 140 and commands the actuator 86 to rotate the cylinder 136 as illustrated in
As illustrated in
After the cylinder 136 has rotated, the human operator 12 inserts the nosepiece 96 of the rivet tool 98 into the receptacle portion 60. The micro-switch 152 detects the nosepiece 96 and signals the control system 58 that the rivet 30 is ready to be delivered. The control system 58 commands the air/vacuum module 144 to supply air to the chamber 146, thereby axially displacing the piston 142 and translating the rivet 30 towards the receptacle portion 60. Initially, the extended spring loaded jaws 154 guide and align the mandrel 32 with the nosepiece 96 as the rivet 30 translates. As the piston 142 approaches full extension, the control system 58 commands the spring loaded jaws 154 to retract, allowing enough space for the wider body portion 34 of the rivet 30. As the spring loaded jaws 154 retract fully, a vacuum generated through the nosepiece 96 of the rivet tool 98 sucks the rivet 30 through the retracted spring loaded jaws 154 and sucks the mandrel 32 into the nosepiece 96. The vacuum holds the mandrel 32, and thus the rivet 30, in the nosepiece 96.
At a predetermined time of approximately 500 ms from when the control system 58 commanded the spring loaded jaws 154 to retract, the control system 58 commands the air/vacuum module 144 to generate a vacuum in the chamber 146, thereby axially retracting the piston 142 in the cylinder 136. At a predetermined time of approximately 500 ms after commanding the air/vacuum module 144, the control system 58 commands the actuator 86 to rotate the cylinder 136 from the delivery position to the rivet receiving position (
Although a preferred embodiment of this invention has been disclosed, a worker of ordinary skill in this art would recognize that certain modifications would come within the scope of this invention. For that reason, the following claims should be studied to determine the true scope and content of this invention.
The present invention is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/837,788, filed on May 3, 2004, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/472,808, filed May 22, 2003, which are incorporated by reference herein.
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60472808 | May 2003 | US |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | 10837788 | May 2004 | US |
| Child | 11448357 | Jun 2006 | US |