This concerns fasteners, including those for retaining pins in hinges.
Most applications of two-part type fastener assemblies provide a desired tension to joined workpieces. Lock bolts, for example, are a specialized type of fastener specifically designed to provide a predetermined amount of stress to the workpieces. Other fastener applications, including hinge pins, require fasteners that allow some relative movement between joined workpieces and therefore do not exert significant, or any, tension on the workpieces and may intentionally provide a predetermined amount of play. A separate issue with many fastener systems is the degree of difficulty required to fasten and un-fasten. In much application the combination of quick and accurate fastening with tamper resistant unfastening is desirable.
These teachings involve fastener assemblies, components, and methods that address the need for fasteners that provide a rapid assembly and tamper resistant disassembly by the crimping of a ferrule into an annular notch on a pin. This is done in such a way that the ferrule's post-crimp configuration results in the pin not being readily removable from its installation.
Embodiments of the invention are illustrated by way of example and not by way of limitation in the accompanying drawings and descriptions.
The fasteners described here span a wide range of sizes and applications but are initially described in their capacity to act as a hinge pin. In many hinge applications two independently provided bodies, each constituting one side, or leaf, of a hinge, are brought together to be joined by the hinge pin. The two leafs' knuckles are appropriately aligned and then a cylindrical pin with a head is dropped into the pivot point intersection of the hinge leafs. In some applications the pin should be positively retained due to vibration, the action of gravity, etc. Some applications requiring positive retention also require a retention secured against extreme and long lasting vibrations while others require a tamper resistant retention.
Cut-away views of this assembly are shown in
To achieve a tamper resistant application many factors must be have particular relationships to each other. For example, the material of the ferrule, the depth and width of the notch and the wall thickness of the ferrule would be such as to produce a finished assembly with a desired degree of resistance to attempts to remove the pin.
This ferrule has a sleeve portion 14 and a flange portion 15 as is also seen in
The general use of crimping has been in electrical applications and other applications where the ferrule is strung over a wire, rope, or steel rope prior to crimping. In those typical cases, the crimping tool has no requirement to hold and support the ferrule as a stand-alone component before or during the crimping operation. The ferrule is held in place by virtue of being strung onto a wire. In general, applications of the present teaching do not have a continuous rod or wire threaded through the sleeve. This creates the new problems of holding the ferrule in the tool, aligning the ferrule to a desired location, and holding the ferrule in that location while crimping is accomplished.
In
After the ferrule is placed in the tool, the tool is used to bring the ferrule to the end of the pin as shown in
In the interest of presenting a specific example of an implemented and tested embodiment the following table shows the dimensions and specifications of the pin, ferrule, and tool illustrated in
The die is part number PATJAWSMD6 and the crimp tool shown is model number PATMD6-14V and 6 tons of radial force is used.
A group of formulas can help in determining sets of values for these parameters effective in creating a working fastener system. The input values are the diameter of the pin proximate to the groove (PBD) and the thickness of the crimp tool die (TDT)
Pin Basic Diameter=input value (F)
Pin Groove Diameter (PGD)=Pin Basic Diameter (PBD)×0.842 (L)
Pin Groove Width (PGW)=Crimp Tool Die Thickness (TDT)×1.75 (B)
Bushing Overall Length, BOL=PBD×1.25 (G)
Bushing Body Outside Diameter (BOD)=PBD×1.25 (I)
Bushing Inside Diameter (BID)=PBD Min to PBD+PBD×0.001 Max (H)
Bushing Flange Diameter (BFD)=PBD×1.50 (G)
Bushing Flange Thickness (BFT)=PGW×0.20 (E)
The pin and ferrule scheme of these teachings have application outside of use as a hinge pin. A general application of joining two workpieces without tension is seen in
The ferrule 13′ shown in
The FIGs. of 6A and 6B also demonstrate the case of joining two or more work pieces with desired predetermined amount of play. The distance P represents the amount of play in the assembly of 6A and 6B as shown. Spacers could be used to reduce the amount of play. Also, the relative lengths could be increased or reduced to change the amount of play. A desired level of frictional contact could be introduced with appropriate spacing and materials.
A second set of variations demonstrate that the pin need not have the shape and configuration of pin 11. In
In some applications a pin may not be holding two or more workpieces together. In the case of a clevis, as seen in
Not all applications involve a pin with a head. A third embodiment is seen in
Eyeglass hinges are an example of these teachings being used on a very different scale. The screws that form eyeglass hinge pins often become unscrewed and fall out. A portion of an eyeglass frame, hinge, and earpiece is shown in
The use of the terms “a” and “an” and “the” and similar referents in the context of describing the invention are to be construed to cover both the singular and the plural, unless otherwise indicated herein or clearly contradicted by context. The use of any and all examples, or exemplary language (“e.g.” or “such as”) provided herein, is intended merely to better illuminate the invention and does not pose a limitation on the scope of the invention unless otherwise claimed. No language in the specification should be construed as indicating any non-claimed element as essential to the practice of the invention.