1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to control of the torque being applied to a body by an impact or impulse tool. More specifically, the invention is a method and apparatus that determines a best mathematical expression for representing individual pulses generated by an impact tool and solving the expression to accurately control the torque being applied to a body.
2. Description of the Related Art
Impact tools (also referred to as impulse or pulse tools) are commonly used in the assembly of large fasteners, such as automotive wheel lug nuts. They are able to deliver large torque forces from a physically compact device and can be operated manually.
As described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,655,471 to Cripe, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, Impax tools operate by applying sequential pulses of torque to a body, in this case a threaded fastener. If the amplitude of the applied torque is high enough to overcome the static friction force of the fastener, the fastener will turn. If the duration of the pulse is short enough, the average operator can manually operate the device. Unfortunately, there is little correlation between the torque within the fastener body applied by an impact tool and the torque observed by the operator. Therefore, impact tools have not been used where accurate control of a fastener torque is important. Rather, controlled-torque assembly processes have been performed manually by an operator with a torque wrench, or in an automated system with a torque-monitored, (non-impact) motor-driven tool, to fine-tune the torque to a pre-determined value. However, these tools are not practical for assembly of large, high-torque fasteners, such as automotive wheel lug nuts.
The most common method of providing the user with a sense of the torque being applied to a fastener is to equip an impulse tool with a torque meter on the tool output shaft. The torque meter is able to electromechanically observe the torque pulses being delivered to the fastener and can be programmed, through an electronic controller, to automatically shut off the impulse tool when a desired torque is reached. A torque meter can produce electronic voltage signals that may be converted to determine the actual torque being applied to a fastener. Some kind of mathematical function is required, however, to convert torque signals from the torque meter into an electronic signal that the controller can use to provide the mechanical feedback (i.e., an automatic shut off) needed by an operator.
Several methods of performing the torque meter data collection and mathematical signal conversion are disclosed in the related art. In U.S. Pat. No. 6,655,471, Cripe et al. disclose using characteristics of a series of pulses to estimate the actual torque being applied to a fastener. In particular, the patent discloses using a collarless torque transducer sensor and induction coils arranged on and around an impact tool shaft to collect imputed torque signals representing the amplitude and duration of each torque pulse. The amplitude and duration of the torque pulse are subtracted from a torque signal and the resulting difference is integrated over time to obtain a fastener angular velocity signal. The angular velocity signal is integrated over time to obtain a displacement signal which can be converted to a torque signal. The resulting estimated torque value is used to determine whether or not to shut off the impact tool.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,311,786 to Giardino et al. discloses using a collarless torque meter and induction coils to collect imputed torque signals acting over a time duration (i.e., an impulse, which is defined as a series of pulses). Knowing the impulse, the torque arm, and the pulse time duration, an accurate measure of the torque can be derived from a determination of the impulse. The impulse value can also be multiplied by a coefficient of proportionality prior to determination of the torque. The coefficient of proportionality is a predetermined value based on the size of the particular tool, e.g., it may vary based on area of magnetic field and manufacturing tolerance. A disadvantage of this method is that it ignores individual pulses and integrates impulses over time.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,366,026 and 5,715,894 to Maruyama et al., disclose controlled impact tools in which direct torque measurements are used. Direct torque measurements are made by measuring the force component of torsional stress on a shaft, as exhibited by a magnetic field about a tool output shaft, at the point in time of impact. Torque is related to the force component times the length of torque arm for a particular pulse. One problem with the methods disclosed in those two patents is that the devices measure torque at a given point in time, which may not accurately represent the true torque because torque measurements fluctuate over time, even after a large number of impacts are applied.
Thus, before the present invention, there was no system or method for dynamically calculating the torque being applied to a fastener by an impact tool using the characteristics of individual pulses over a period of time. There remains, therefore, the need for such a system to better control impact tools and prevent under- or over-tightening and loosening of fasteners or other shafts by impact tools.
Impact tools use a series of force blows on an anvil attached to a body to tighten or loosen the body. In the case of threaded joint, an impact tool uses a series of short-duration force blows on the side of the head portion at the end of a fastener to turn the threaded shaft portion in the joint. A pulse representing shear stress on the anvil occurs when the impact tool impacts the anvil and kinetic energy is transferred to the joint.
Each pulse of an impact tool will have roughly the same pulse width (i.e., duration) but the torque amplitude will vary slightly over time as shown in
Accordingly, it is a principal object of the present invention to provide a system and method for determining the actual torque applied by an impact tool to a shaft using a set of parameters that show correlation between impact tool pulses and the residual torque without knowing the exact relationship formula.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a system and method for correlating pulses with the residual torque in a fastener body using information about individual pulses.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide a system and method for determining torque by converting the non-linear pulse information into a linear expression of torque using a best-fit method.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a system and method for determining torque by converting the non-linear pulse information into a non-linear simplified expression of torque.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide a system and method for determining torque by using pulse-specific information expressed in millivolts (i.e., amplitude), milliseconds (i.e., duration), millivolt-milliseconds (i.e., area), and numerical counts (i.e., number of pulses, number of fasteners).
It is another object of the present invention to provide a system and method for determining torque that can be easily implemented on an inexpensive embedded controller within an impact tool.
These and other objects and features of the present invention are accomplished as embodied and fully described herein by a method for determining the torque applied to a fastener by applying a torque pulse to a fastener, detecting a signal representing the time-amplitude shape of the torque pulse, fitting an equation that approximates the torque pulse, processing the equation to determine the torque being applied to the fastener, comparing the torque to a pre-set torque objective, and applying a second torque pulse to the fastener if the torque is less than the pre-set torque objective.
The fitted equation includes one or more parameters including, but not limited to, the positive amplitude of the pulses, the negative amplitude, the absolute value of the positive amplitude minus the negative amplitude, the integrated area of the positive portion of the pulse curve, the integrated area of the negative portion of the pulse curve, the duration of the positive portion, the duration of the negative portion, the area from the positive amplitude to 50% of the positive amplitude, the area from the negative amplitude to 50% of the negative amplitude, the duration of the positive portion measured at 50% of the positive amplitude, the duration of the negative portion measured at 50% of the negative amplitude, the time between the start of the positive pulse and the actual pulse peak amplitude, the time between the start of the negative pulse and the actual pulse peak amplitude, and the time between the peaks of the first and second torque pulses. The equation representing the torque pulse may be linear or non-linear.
The objects and features of the present invention are also accomplished by an apparatus for producing a plurality of torque pulses during a tightening sequence of a fastener that includes an impact tool, a shaft connected to the impact tool, a torque transducer coupled to the shaft, a sensor proximate the torque transducer, and a controller. The controller enables the impact tool, applies one or more pulses to the shaft, receives signals from the sensor, monitors and conditions the signals, selects an equation that approximates the signals, processes the equation to obtain the torque on the fastener, and disables the impact tool. In one embodiment of the invention, the impact tool is a pneumatic torque wrench.
Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become evident to one skilled in the art from the following detailed description of the invention in conjunction with the referenced drawings.
a is a continuation of the process flow diagram of
b is a continuation of the process flow diagram of
c is a continuation of the process flow diagram of
d is a continuation of the process flow diagram of
In the present invention, several preferred embodiments are described for illustrative purposes. Turning first to
The impact tool 30 is connected to a remote pneumatic driver source 308, such as an air compressor.
The shaft 304 is adapted to be coupled to a fastener 40. The fastener 40 has a head portion 402 and a threaded shaft portion 404. The head portion 402 may be a hexagonal head, for example, which is well known in the art. The shaft 304 may be coupled to the fastener 40 using an anvil or other device (not shown) attached to the end of the shaft 304.
Except as noted below, the system of the present invention is similar to that disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,655,471 to Cripe et al., which is incorporated herein by reference, with respect to the impact tool 30 and a controller 310. The controller 310 of the present invention will include circuits different than those disclosed by Cripe et al.; the circuits are adapted to perform the functions of digitizing and parsing the pulse signals shown in
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the torque transducer 306 is a magnetoelastic torque transducer, which produces a magnetic field proximate the output shaft 304 in relation to the amount of torque being applied to the shaft 304. For example the magnetoelastic torque transducers, such as are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,047,605 to Garshelis, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, can be used in the preferred embodiment. Shaft 304 can be the output shaft of the impact tool or a shaft extension suitable for retrofiting conventional impact tools with the control system of the invention.
The output from the torque transducer 306 is a 0 to 5-volt (direct current) (VDC) signal centered at 2.5 VDC (normalized to zero volts as shown in
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, the controller 310 makes use of three separate printed circuit boards, which are designated as PCB32, PCB50 and PCB51 (not shown). The PCB32 printed circuit board is a general purpose device that performs the general readout functions such as data acquisition, display and communications via a serial port (not shown). The PCB32 also has the ability to execute certain control functions such as activating a solenoid. It can also be expanded to add on other modular printed circuit boards as the application demands.
The PCB50 contains circuits designed to receive the signal input from the magnetic field sensors and to convert the same to a voltage output. This is the first printed circuit board in line to receive the signal directly form the impact tool 30. The output of this is fed into the PCB51 interface card.
The PCB51 contains circuits for processing the impact signals at a high processing speed. This printed circuit board also hosts the torque prediction and decision-making algorithm embedded in the software, as explained below.
The method of the invention is described by reference to various process flow charts, beginning with
Referring to
Turning now to
y=f(x)
Where y is the torque on the fastener 40 joint and x is the stress on the anvil.
The pulses from the torque transducer 306 sensor can be digitized and parsed using electronic circuits and software to separate out a number of parameters that describe the individual pulses shown in
Correlation can be shown for a given subset of those parameters, φ0 . . . φk, and the fastener 40 torque, which allows the function f(x) to be approximated using simpler functions φ0(x), φ1(x), . . . φk(x). Where the functions are added together, f(x) becomes a linear expression:
y=f(x)=β0φ0(x)+β1φ1(x)+β2φ2(x)+ . . . βkφk(x)
Where β0 . . . βk, are correlation coefficients. The method of least squares can then be used to determine the coefficients, β0 . . . βk, for the linear expression.
In more simplified terms, the above can be expressed as follows:
y=f(x)=[(β0·positive peak)+(β1·negative peak)+(β2·positive pulse area)+ . . . ]/f
Where f is a scaling factor.
To calculate the coefficients, β0 . . . βk, a number of data samples are gathered that relate a set of given parameters to a known torque on a fastener 40. The number of samples, n, must be larger than the number of coefficients used, k. The parameters for the samples are then organized in a matrix A and vector, Y, where s represents a given sample run:
The matrix equation, AB=Y+E describes the relationship. The vector E is the error associated with each calculation, measured in units of torque. To calculated the coefficients, the sum of the squares of the derivations is defined as:
The coefficients, β, may be determined in such a way as S assumes a minimum. One way of accomplishing this is to denote the sums:
From these expression, a matrix equation may be obtained:
Using matrix inversion and multiplication a set of best fit β's may be calculated. The accuracy of the coefficients with respect to a given sample can be calculated by applying the coefficients to the sample matrix and comparing the results with the recorded torque readings.
Although the above technique of converting the pulse curves into linear expressions is expedient in terms of simplifying the computations and decreasing the time required to execute the computations, which is an important consideration in selecting a processor speed and coding the programming routines, other expressions, both linear and non-linear, are also contemplated by the present invention. That is because each impact tool may create slightly different pulses that may need to be correlated to the actual torque using different mathematical expressions. The present invention contemplates utilizing the artificial intelligence technique known as an expert system, which is designed to simulate the thought processes and the procedure that might be followed by an expert in determining which expression and set of parameters to be used, based upon the best available data, to determine the torque values. Another method contemplated by the invention is to simply code multiple routines covering several different linear and non-linear expressions that can handle the digitized and parsed pulse data and that execute sequentially by the controller 310 until a desired mathematical expression of the pulses is found to determine the torque values.
Turning again to
The SETTLE mode is entered immediately after the tail of an impact is detected or when an un-tightening (reverse) impact is detected. In this mode, a value for the variable DCBIAS is not calculated because the sensor input has not settled yet. The variable DCBIAS is set to a computed value that establishes the zero torque (zero voltage) reference. This is used to compensate for drift or offset of the sensor zero torque output which, in theory, is zero volts but, in practice, may not be zero.
In decision step 510, the algorithm branches to a separate routine labeled “A” or continues to process step 512, in which the A/D converter input ring buffer is updated. In decision step 514, either the DCBIAS value is computed and the interrupt service routine 502 is returned to the main process loop 404 (
The REST mode of the system is the default mode. In this mode the interrupt service routing 502 is run at about 15 KHz. The torque transducer 306 sensor is scanned, if an impact is not detected the interrupt service routine 502 does some timer house keeping and updates the DCBIAS value.
Turning now to
Turning now to
The controller 310 stops scanning the torque transducer 306 sensor when, in decision step 538, it detects the tail of the impact (i.e., the signal crosses from a negative voltage signal to a positive voltage signal, taking into account the computed DCBIAS voltage values in decision and process steps 542, 544, 548, 550 and 552). Then, the controller 310 runs the torque prediction equations in process step 540 and calculates torque values in step 546. If the calculated torque value matches the inputed target torque value within an acceptable range (say, 10%), the controller 310 disengages the remote pneumatic driver source 308 (
Turning now to
One of the counters initialized in process step 524 (
Although this invention has been described in connection with specific embodiments, objects and purposes for the invention, it will be appreciated by one of skill in the art that various modifications of the invention, other than those discussed above, may be resorted to without departing from the nature and scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4106570 | Eshghy et al. | Aug 1978 | A |
4669319 | Heyraud | Jun 1987 | A |
5366026 | Maruyama et al. | Nov 1994 | A |
5715894 | Maruyama et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
6311786 | Giardino et al. | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6655471 | Cripe et al. | Dec 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050167130 A1 | Aug 2005 | US |