Swage and flare joints enable two tubes having about the same overall perimeter size to be fitted together, one inside the other. In general, this involves flaring a first tube so as to increase the inside perimeter of the first tube, and swaging the second tube so as to decrease the outside perimeter of the second tube. In this way, the second tube can be received within the first tube.
The joint thus produced however may prove problematic insofar as there may be very limited contact between the swaged tube and the flared tube. This result can occur when the walls of a square swaged tube are deformed along their a substantial portion of their length such that the only contact between the swaged tube and a mating flared tube occurs at the four corners of the swaged tube. Such point contact may permit movement between the swaged tube and the flared tube. As well, point contact between the swaged tube and the flared tube, may contribute to instability of the assembled joint that could result in wobbling of a structure supported by the joint, and/or may result in a relatively weaker joint that could fail in some loading situations.
In view of the foregoing, it would be useful to provide swage and flare joints that implement substantial contact between the swaged portion and the flared portion of the joint.
It should be noted that the embodiments disclosed herein do not constitute an exhaustive summary of all possible embodiments, nor does this brief summary constitute an exhaustive list of all aspects of any particular embodiment(s). Rather, this brief summary simply presents selected aspects of some example embodiments. It should be noted that nothing herein should be construed as constituting an essential or indispensable element of any invention or embodiment. Rather, various aspects of the disclosed embodiments may be combined in a variety of ways so as to define yet further embodiments. Such further embodiments are considered as being within the scope of this disclosure.
As well, none of the embodiments embraced within the scope of this disclosure should be construed as resolving, or being limited to the resolution of, any particular problem(s). Nor should such embodiments be construed to implement, or be limited to implementation of, any particular technical effect(s) or solution(s).
The present disclosure is generally concerned with joints that may be used to releasably, or permanently, connect a pair of mating elements, where the mating elements are configured such that one mating element can be partly received within the other mating element. More specifically, embodiments of the invention include swage and flare joints, as well as joints that include a swaged portion that mates with an unflared portion.
Embodiments within the scope of this disclosure may include any one or more of the following elements, and features of elements, in any combination: a mating element having a swaged portion and/or a flared portion; a tubular, or substantially solid, mating element having a swaged portion and/or a flared portion; a mating element having a swaged end and/or a flared end; a tubular, or substantially solid, mating element having a swaged end and/or a flared end; a swaged portion with substantially straight walls; a swaged portion with substantially straight walls, one or more of which includes a deformation; a swaged portion having one or more walls configured for substantial contact with a mating flared portion; a swaged portion whose walls are configured for substantial contact with a mating flared portion; a swaged portion configured to be received, permanently or removably, within a flared portion; a swaged portion configured to contact a mating flared portion at the corners of a perimeter of the swaged portion and at one or more other locations of the perimeter of the swaged portion; a swaged portion with a substantially square or rectangular cross-section; a swaged portion with a cross-section whose shape is other than substantially square; a swaged portion with a substantially circular cross-section; a swaged portion having three or more walls; a flared portion whose walls are configured for substantial contact with a mating swaged portion; a flare configured to mate, either permanently or releasably, with any of the aforementioned swages such that substantial contact between the flare and swage is achieved; any of the aforementioned swaged portions including one or more walls or surfaces that include a respective local deformity; any combination of any one or more of the aforementioned swages and flares; and, a basketball system including any combination of any one or more of the aforementioned swages and flares.
Following is a non-exclusive list of embodiments within the scope of the invention. It should be understood that aspects of the various embodiments may be combined in other ways to define still further embodiments.
In a first example embodiment, a first mating element has a swaged portion whose outer surface is configured to make substantial contact with the inner surface of a flared second mating element.
In a second example embodiment, a first mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of walls, each of which is configured to make substantial contact with a corresponding wall of a flared second mating element.
In a third example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of walls, each of which is configured to make substantial contact with a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion.
In a fourth example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of substantially straight walls, each of which is configured to make substantial contact with a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion.
In a fifth example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of walls, each of which has an outer surface configured to make substantial contact with an inner surface of a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion.
In a sixth example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with four walls that collectively define a generally square or rectangular cross section shape of the first tubular mating element, each of the four walls having an outer surface configured to make substantial contact with an inner surface of a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion.
In a seventh example embodiment, a first mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of walls, each of which is configured to make substantial contact with a corresponding wall of a flared second mating element, and one or more of the walls of the first mating element includes a local deformation.
In an eighth example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of walls, each of which is configured to make substantial contact with a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion, and one or more of the walls of the swaged portion includes a local deformation.
In a ninth example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of substantially straight walls, each of which is configured to make substantial contact with a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion, and one or more of the walls of the first tubular mating element includes a local deformation.
In a tenth example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with a plurality of walls, each of which has an outer surface configured to make substantial contact with an inner surface of a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion, and one or more of the walls of the first tubular mating element includes a local deformation.
In an eleventh example embodiment, a first tubular mating element has a swaged portion with four walls that collectively define a generally square or rectangular cross section shape of the first tubular mating element, each of the four walls having an outer surface configured to make substantial contact with an inner surface of a corresponding wall of a second tubular mating element having a flared portion, and one or more of the walls of the first tubular mating element includes a local deformation.
In variations of a twelfth example embodiment, a basketball system includes a support pole, and/or other structure(s), that incorporates any of the preceding embodiments.
As well, this disclosure embraces the embodiments disclosed herein both in respective assembled forms, and in respective kit forms. When in the form of a kit, the embodiment may be partly or completely disassembled. For example, an element including a swaged portion and an element including a mating flared portion may be separate pieces in such a kit.
The appended drawings contain figures of some example embodiments to further clarify various aspects of the present disclosure. It will be appreciated that these drawings depict only some embodiments of the disclosure and are not intended to limit its scope in any way. The disclosure will be described and explained with additional specificity and detail through the use of the accompanying drawings in which:
The present disclosure is generally concerned with joints that may be used to releasably, or permanently, connect a pair of mating elements, where embodiments of the mating elements are configured such that one mating element can be partly received within the other mating element. More specifically, embodiments of the invention include joints that including a swaged portion and a flared portion that are configured to mate, either releasably or permanently, with each other. The swaged portion may include one or more local deformities in one or more surfaces that interface with the flared portion. Embodiments of the invention also include a die, or dies, configured to enable production of the swaged portions and flared portions disclosed herein.
Embodiments of the invention can be employed in a wide variety of applications and, accordingly, the scope of the invention is not limited to the example applications and structures disclosed herein. Rather, such applications, which include outdoor equipment such as playground equipment and basketball systems, are discussed herein for the purpose of illustration, and not by way of limitation. In general, embodiments of the invention can be employed in any application or environment where it is desired to permanently, or releasably, attach a pair of elements together.
With reference to one of the examples noted above, elements of outdoor equipment, such as playground equipment and basketball systems, may be constructed with a variety of components and materials including, but not limited to, plastic (including injection-molded, blow-molded, roto-molded, and twin sheet plastic structures and elements) including polycarbonates, composites, metals, and combinations of any of the foregoing.
Suitable metals may include steel, aluminum, and aluminum alloys, although the skilled person will understand that a variety of other metals, and combinations of metals, may be employed as well and the scope of the invention is not limited to the foregoing examples. Where metal is employed in the construction of a component, the metal elements may take one or more forms including, but not limited to, square tube, rectangular tube, oval tube, polygonal tube, triangular tube, round tube, pipe, and solid, rather than tubular, forms of any of the foregoing. Any of these tubes, pipes or solid pieces may include radiused corners where walls intersect with each other, so as to reduce or eliminate stress concentrations. Metal is but one example of a plastically deformable material that can be used in the constructions of at least some embodiments of the invention.
Depending upon the material(s) employed in the construction of outdoor equipment, a variety of methods and components may be used to connect, releasably or permanently, various elements of the outdoor equipment. For example, the various metal elements of outdoor equipment or components within the scope of this disclosure may be attached to each other by any one or more of processes such as welding or brazing, mechanically by way of fasteners such as bolts, screws, pins, and rivets, for example, by clamps, by mechanical structures such as swages and flares, and by any combination of one or more of the foregoing.
Some, none, or all portions of one or more of the outdoor equipment and its components may be coated with paint or other materials. Surface treatments and textures may also be applied to portions of the outdoor equipment. At least some of such materials may serve to help prevent, or reduce, rust and corrosion.
Directing attention first to
As indicated in
This configuration has been achieved by a swaging process that causes a deformation of each of the walls 102. In particular, each wall 102 deflects inwardly toward the interior of the swaged portion 100. As a result of the deflection of each of the walls 102, the overall length of the perimeter of the terminal end of the swaged portion 100 is relatively shorter than it would be if the walls 102 were not so deflected, although the basic overall shape of the cross-section of the swaged portion 100 is generally retained. As can be seen in
While the configuration of the swaged portion 100 is adequate to ensure that the swaged portion 100 can mate with the flared portion 200 illustrated in
Such minimal contact between the swaged portion 100 and the flared portion 200 may be problematic insofar as it may permit movement between the swaged portion 100 and flared portion 200, may contribute to instability of the assembled joint that could result in wobbling of a structure supported by the joint, and/or may result in a relatively weaker joint that could fail in some loading situations. Concerns such as these could result in a need for supplemental support of the joint such as by way of fasteners (not shown) positioned in holes 206. However, the use of fasteners can complicate the assembly of the joint, and may make the joint harder to break down, should there be a need to do so.
In light of considerations such as those noted above, it would be useful, in at least some instances, to construct a swage and flare joint that provides for relatively more substantial contact between the swaged portion and the flared portion of the joint. Accordingly, attention is directed now to
As used herein, swaging and swaging processes include forging processes in which one or more dimensions of an item are altered. Swaging can be performed as a cold working process where an item is forced into a confining die to reduce one or more dimensions of the item, such as the length of the perimeter of the item for example.
Swaging an item with one or more dies can also be performed as a hot working process. The use of one or more dies in this way is sometimes referred to as tube swaging. Another type of swaging process, sometimes referred to as rotary swaging or radial forging, involves the use of multiple dies to hammer a workpiece into a desired shape, and reducing one or more dimensions of the workpiece in the process. Rotary swaging may be particularly useful for shaping solid workpieces.
It should be noted that any die or group of dies configured to enable the formation of swaged portions such as are disclosed herein are considered to be within the scope of the invention.
With particular reference to
In the example of
As indicated in
Thus, the walls 302 differ from the walls 202 indicated in
In the example of
As well, and apparent from
As well, the local deformations 306 each have substantially the same width and depth as each other, although that is not required. More particularly, and with continued reference to the example of
It will be appreciated that the configuration of the local deformations 306 set forth in
It should be noted that local deformations can be employed in walls that are not straight, or not substantially straight. For example, one or more local deformations could be employed in a swaged portion, such as a substantially circular swaged portion for example, that included one or more curved walls. One example of a circular swaged portion includes one, or two, pairs of opposing local deformations.
Moreover, in some embodiments of a swaged portion that include multiple walls, fewer than all of the walls, such as only one, two, or three, walls may include a local deformation. Further, where multiple local deformations are employed in an embodiment, those local deformations may all have substantially the same configuration. In one or more alternative embodiments, at least one local deformation has a configuration that is substantially different from the configuration of another local deformation.
As well, any one or more of attributes such as the size, number, shape, location, and orientation of the local deformations can be varied. Two or more local deformations in a single swaged portion can be substantially the same as, or differ from, each other in any grouping of one or more of the aforementioned attributes.
In some example embodiments, one or more walls of a swaged portion include multiple local deformations. With regard to the aforementioned attributes, the multiple local deformations in such examples may be substantially the same as each other in one or more of those attributes, or may be different from each other in one or more of those attributes.
With regard to the example configuration of
With reference now to
In some embodiments, the swaged portion 300 may be permanently connected to the flared portion 400 once received therein. Suitable processes for permanently connecting the flared portion 400 and swaged portion 300 are disclosed elsewhere herein, and include welding, soldering, brazing, or the use of fasteners. Combinations of these processes may also be employed.
Turning now to
As noted elsewhere herein, the joint 500 could be employed in a wide variety of different applications, one example of which is a support pole for a basketball system. In one example of such an embodiment, the flared portion 400 and swaged portion 300 would each comprise an element of a respective piece of a support pole. The flared portion 400 could be implemented in either the upper or lower piece of such support pole, and the swaged portion 300 could likewise be implemented in either the upper or lower piece of such a support pole.
With the foregoing in view, attention is directed now to
The basketball system 600 includes a backboard assembly 602 which supports a goal 604. The backboard 602, in turn, is connected to a support pole 606 either directly, or indirectly by way of one or more intervening structures such as, but not limited to, clamps, brackets, arms. The support pole 606 is connected to a base 608 that may include one or more wheels or other mechanisms to enable the portability of the basketball system 600. As well, the basketball system 600 includes a connecting structure 610 that includes, in this example, a pair of upper arms 610a and a pair of lower arms 610b, all of which are rotatably connected to the support pole 606 and to a frame of the backboard assembly 602. A height adjustment mechanism 612 connected to the arms 610a enables a user to raise and lower the backboard 602 to a desired height. In the illustrated example, the height adjustment mechanism 612 takes the form of a screw mechanism that can be rotated by the user to change the height of the backboard 602.
The support pole 606 includes two or more pieces that fit together, such as segments 606a and 606b for example. The segments 606a and 606b of the support pole 606 thus collectively define a joint 650. The joint 650 can take the form of any of the joint embodiments disclosed herein, and the basketball system 600 may have one, or multiple, joints 650. As well, the segments 606a and 606b can take any of the forms of tubing or solid portions disclosed herein. In one particular embodiment, the segments 606a and 606b each take the form of square tube, although that particular form is not required.
In the example of
As well, the segment 606b can include an indicator 606c that provides a visual cue to the user that the joint 650 is fully assembled, that is, the swaged portion of the segment 606b is fully received in the flared portion of the segment 606a. The indicator 606c may take, for example, the form of an inscribed and/or painted line or other marking which, when positioned near the bottom of segment 606a after the segment 606b has been inserted into segment 606a, indicates that the swaged portion of the segment 606b is fully received in the flared portion of the segment 606a.
Turning now to
A variety of concepts will be apparent from the example swaged portions 700a-700g set forth in
For example, and with reference first to swaged portions 700a, embodiments of the invention include swaged portions that have a single substantially continuous wall, such as wall 702a for example, rather than a set of walls that intersect with each other. Thus, the example swaged portions 700a are generally circular in their cross-section shape and, as shown, can be tubular or solid, and also include one or more local deformations 704a. The local deformations 704a, where more than one are present, can be evenly, or randomly, distributed about the circumference of the swaged portions 700a.
It should be noted that, in some circumstances at least, the use of one or more local deformations in embodiments that include a single substantially continuous wall may not provide as great an effect, in terms of contact between the swaged and flared portions, as the effect provided when one or more local deformities are employed in embodiments that include a plurality of discrete walls that intersect with each other. Nonetheless, embodiments of swaged portions that include a single substantially continuous wall with one or more local deformities may be beneficial in some applications.
As indicated by the swaged portions 700b, embodiments of the invention include swaged portions that include fewer than four walls. In the particular illustrated example, the swaged portions 700b, which can be in tubular or solid form, have a cross-section shape that is generally triangular and includes three walls 702b, any one or more of which can include one or more local deformations, such as local deformations 704b. The generally triangular cross-section shape can be any triangular shape, and is not limited to an equilateral triangle shape.
With continued reference to
As indicated by the swaged portions 700d of
Turning now to
As further indicated in
At least some embodiments of the invention are directed to swaged portions, such as swaged portions 700g, that include one or more walls 702g having local deformities 704g of different shapes. Local deformities 704g of different respective shapes can be combined in a single wall 702g, or walls 702g. Additionally, or alternatively, and as indicated in
In still other embodiments of the invention, a swaged portion, such as swaged portion 700h for example, may include two or more discrete elements 702h that can be employed together as a single swaged portion 700h. The two or more discrete elements 702h may, or may not, be joined, permanently or releasably, together. For example, the discrete elements 702h may be releasably joined together by fasteners or respective mating structures included in each of the discrete elements 702h, or permanently joined together, such as by brazing or welding for example. In the illustrated example, the discrete element 702h each include respective local deformations 704h and/or cooperate to define still other local deformations 706h.
With attention now to
While not specifically illustrated, dies may also be used to produce one or more of the flared portions disclosed herein. For example, a die in the shape of die 804 may be forced into a square tube to produce a flared portion in the square tube.
As disclosed herein, in at least some instances, a pair of dies, rather than just a single die, may be used to produce configurations such as those disclosed in
In some instances, the die 805 can be omitted and the workpiece 803 can be shaped using only the die 804. This single die process can also be used in any of the other embodiments disclosed herein.
Directing attention finally to
At 904, one or more local deformities are formed in one or more walls of the workpiece as a result of application of the die, or dies. Such local deformities may include any of the example deformities disclosed herein. The method 900 then advances to 906 where the workpiece is swaged. In at least some embodiments, the swaging 906 reduces an effective perimeter size of the workpiece. It should be noted that 904 and 906 can be performed sequentially, or substantially simultaneously with each other.
After the workpiece has been swaged, and the desired local deformity, or deformities, formed in the workpiece, the workpiece can be removed 908 from engagement or contact with the die, or dies. Depending upon the dies used, and the configuration of the workpiece, some or all of the method 900 may be performed more than once on the workpiece.
As will be apparent from the present disclosure, one or more embodiments of the invention may be advantageous in various regards. By way of illustration, one or more embodiments may enable more substantial contact between a swaged portion and mating flared portion through the use of one or more local deformities in one or more walls of the swaged portion. This substantial contact, in turn, may enable a more stable and stronger joint than would be obtained in configurations where such substantial contact is not achieved. Such stability can be particularly desirable in systems, such as basketball systems for example, that are subjected to repeated dynamic loading, and/or to static loading.
Although this disclosure has been described in terms of certain embodiments, other embodiments apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art are also within the scope of this disclosure. Accordingly, the scope of the disclosure is intended to be defined only by the claims which follow.
This application hereby claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application, Ser. No. 61/917,237, entitled SWAGE AND FLARE JOINTS, and filed on Dec. 17, 2013. The aforementioned application is incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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2265109 | Birkhofer | Dec 1941 | A |
2500720 | Van Der Heem | Mar 1950 | A |
3072988 | Pennington | Jan 1963 | A |
3176987 | Johnston | Apr 1965 | A |
3865498 | Okuto | Feb 1975 | A |
3936206 | Meisberger | Feb 1976 | A |
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20150165301 | Maisey | Jun 2015 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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PCTUS1453505 | Dec 2014 | WO |
Entry |
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Rob Dean, Selecting a Tube End Forming Method, TJP—The Tube Pipe Journal, Sep. 2006, http://www.thefabricator.com/article/tubepipefabrication/selecting-a-tube-end-forming-method. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20150165301 A1 | Jun 2015 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61917237 | Dec 2013 | US |