This application claims the benefit of priority as a national phase of International Patent Application No. PCT/NO2003/000391, filed on Nov. 21, 2003, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a sub-frame for a car and in particular a lightweight sub-frame made from high-strength aluminium.
Sub-frames are used in modern cars as anchoring points for suspension elements and heavy transmission elements. In particular, sub-frames are used in the front of the car for carrying the engine and the front suspension elements. The sub-frame is normally a U-formed or a rectangular closed frame made from steel or aluminium. Normally, the frame is made from a number of structural members that are welded together. In addition, a number of brackets are welded to the frame, in order to provide fastening points for the engine, control arms or steering components. In case of an aluminium construction, the number of components that have to be welded poses a challenge, as the individual components must be produced with very tight tolerances in order to use automatic welding robots. At the welding joints, gaps of maximum 0.2 mm are allowed. These high-precision production methods are of limited value in the finished product, i.e. the sub-frame is produced with tight tolerances even in places where this is unnecessary for the function of the frame, but contributes to a high production cost.
A possible production method according to prior art would be to use a square section profile and produce four different components, and weld these components together into the finished frame. Subsequently, a number of mounting details, like the engine mounting brackets, must be welded to the frame. The machining of the individual components of the frame means that a lot of material is wasted, in a typical example a frame of about 8-8.5 kg finished weight will need about 20 kg raw aluminium material. This means that about 11.5-12 kg is wasted. In addition, the welding seams are potentially weak points as the welding process impairs the structure of the aluminium.
Japanese patent application 58041737 describes a frame for a motor cycle that is manufactured from a multi chamber profile, probably in aluminium. The profile is split at the ends, between the chambers, and bent into a frame. However, this part is supplemented with cast members that are welded to it, as well as a multitude of mounting brackets that are welded or riveted to the frame. Secondary channels are used as reinforcing elements/load carrying elements in the overall frame construction.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method for producing a sub-frame for a vehicle with lower production costs than prior art methods.
Another object is to provide a method for providing a sub-frame involving fewer welding operations compared to prior art methods, and preferably involving no welding at all.
Still another object of the invention is to provide a manufacturing method that gives better yield of the raw materials involved. Typically, about 85-90% of the raw materials, in this case an aluminium profile, will end up in the finished product.
Embodiments according to the invention also include an aluminium profile especially designed for the manufacture of said sub-frame. Other embodiments of the invention will appear from the following dependent claims.
The invention will now be described in reference to the appended drawings, in which:
However, it is preferred to use a profile with ridges 19, 23, using a knife to remove superfluous material, as by this method production of aluminium chips is avoided, making a subsequent cleaning step unnecessary.
A core idea of the present invention is to separate the functions of the frame between the two channels, by assigning the load carrying function to one channel, while mounting points are concentrated to the other channel. In the frame shown in
However, in
The dotted lines illustrate how the engine-mounting brackets may be produced by collapsing a part of the right channel 13. In this way, the continuous structure of the channel is preserved.
While the sub-frame shown in
Still another variation is to form the sub-frame as a u-shaped structure, open to the rear, and close the sub-frame with a cross member spanning the opening.
It is also possible to produce the sub-frame from a less complicated profile, i.e. a profile with only two channels, and dispensing with the intervening “split” channel. If ridges are present, they will appear in the walls of one of the channels. Splitting of the profile will result in one channel that is closed (in cross section), and one that is u-shaped.
As it is of importance to keep the load-bearing channel intact, this should be formed from the closed channel. Brackets and mounting points are then formed in the u-channel.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO03/00391 | 11/21/2003 | WO | 00 | 5/19/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2005/049409 | 6/2/2005 | WO | A |
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