The present invention relates generally to threaded fasteners of any size, and may be useful for threaded fasteners having a major diameter between about 0.8 millimeter and about 6 millimeter.
Threaded fasteners such as screws are used in many applications to connect one component or part to another. Many screws are installed through a portion of one component and threaded into second component to clamp the components together. Many component shapes and configurations have been contemplated for retaining a threaded fastener, such as a blind or through hole formed in the component for engaging the threads of the fastener. The blind or through hole may be provided in an embossment or may be provided in the component material thickness.
Many applications including automotive, electronic, and consumer products require threaded fasteners that maintain desired clamping forces through vibration and other in-use loads. A common problem with prior fasteners included loosening under vibration. Other prior fasteners stripped too easily during installation providing reduced clamping and premature assembly failure. Certain prior fasteners create excessive radial stress around the hole during installation, particularly in an embossment, that weakens the component and may cause premature assembly failure.
Fastener coatings have been developed to compensate for some of the failures of prior fasteners, such as thread-sealing adhesives, thread lubricants, and anti-vibration coatings. However, thread coatings require additional material cost and application cost, and are increasingly difficult to apply as fastener sizes become smaller. There remains a need for a threaded fastener that overcomes these and other disadvantages of the prior art.
We have found that increasing the range of seating torque for installing the fastener, or the seating torque window, reduces strip-out failures by providing for greater variability of the screw driver. Therefore, what is disclosed is a threaded fastener comprising a threaded portion with a ratio of pitch diameter to minor diameter less than 1.28, and the threaded portion with a major diameter portion, a leading flank having a normal angle between 10° and 60°, a trailing flank having a normal angle between 1° and 30°, and a shank portion extending between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads of a arcuate surface having a radius greater than the thread height. The ratio between the axial length of the shank portion to thread height may be between 1.5 and 3.0. The arcuate surface forming the shank portion may have a radius between 1.2 and 1.8 times the thread height.
The normal angle of the leading flank of the threaded portion may be greater than the normal angle of the trailing flank of the threaded portion. Alternatively or in addition, the normal angle of the leading flank of the threaded portion may be between 1.5 and 2.5 times the normal angle of the trailing flank of the threaded portion. Alternatively, the normal angle of the leading flank and the normal angle of the trailing flank may be substantially the same. In yet another alternative, the normal angle of the leading flank and the normal angle of the trailing flank may be compound angles.
The threaded fastener may be adapted to assemble parts made from materials of plastic, brass, aluminum, wood, concrete, and steel.
The threaded fastener may include a plurality of grooves extending transversely through the major diameter portion of the threaded portion. Alternatively or in addition, the threaded fastener may include a plurality of grooves extending transversely through the major diameter portion of adjacent threads of the threaded portion.
The major diameter portion of the threaded portion may be tapered toward the leading flank, the trailing flank, or both. Alternatively, the major diameter portion of the threaded portion may be arcuate.
The threaded fastener may have at least one minor protrusion formed along at least a portion of the shank portion of the threaded portions positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. The minor protrusion may be continuous along the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. Alternatively, the minor protrusion may be intermittent along at least a portion of the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. The height of the minor protrusion may be not more than 30% of the thread height. Alternatively, the height of the minor protrusion may be not more than 20% of the thread height. At least a part of the minor protrusion may have a cross-sectional shape selected from the group consisting of arcuate, rectangular, elliptical, trapezoidal, and triangular. A lead side of the minor protrusion may have a normal angle between 10° and 60°.
Also disclosed is a threaded fastener comprising a threaded portion with a major diameter portion, a leading flank having a normal angle between 1° and 60°, a trailing flank having a normal angle between 1° and 60°, and a shank portion extending between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads, and at least one minor protrusion formed along at least a portion of the shank portion of the threaded portions positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads.
The minor protrusion may be continuous along the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. Alternatively, the minor protrusion may be intermittent along at least a portion of the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. The height of the minor protrusion may be not more than 30% of the thread height. Alternatively, the height of the minor protrusion may be not more than 20% of the thread height. At least a part of the minor protrusion may have a cross-sectional shape selected from the group consisting of arcuate, rectangular, elliptical, trapezoidal, and triangular. A lead side of the minor protrusion may have a normal angle between 10° and 60°.
The leading flank of the fastener may have a normal angle between 10° and 60°, and the trailing flank may have a normal angle between 1° and 30°.
Referring now to
The threaded portion 24 may have a ratio of pitch diameter dp to minor diameter dm less than 1.28. Alternatively, the ratio of pitch diameter dp to minor diameter dm may be less than 1.15. In yet another alternative, the ratio of pitch diameter dp to minor diameter dm may be less than 1.12. The pitch diameter dp is defined as the diameter above the minor diameter dm where the dimension through the thread at the pitch diameter is equal to the distance between adjacent threads at the same diameter.
The leading flank 32 is angled toward the lead end 26 defined in profile by an angle between the leading flank 32 and a plane normal to the longitudinal axis of the fastener, or normal angle α, as shown in
The leading flank 32 may have a normal angle α between about 10° and 60°, and the trailing flank 34 may have a normal angle β between about 1° and 30°. Alternatively, the leading flank 32 may have a normal angle α between about 15° and 40°, and the trailing flank 34 may have a normal angle β between about 5° and 20°. In one application, the leading flank 32 may have a normal angle α of 20° and the trailing flank 34 may have a normal angle β of 10°.
Optionally, the normal angle α of the leading flank 32 may be a compound angle as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
The threaded fastener 20 may have at least one minor protrusion 40 formed along at least a portion of the shank portion 36 of the threaded portions 24 positioned between the trailing flank 34 and the leading flank 32 of adjacent threads as shown in
The minor protrusion 40 may be continuous along the shank portion 36 positioned between the trailing flank 34 and the leading flank 32 of adjacent threads as shown in
The threaded fastener 20 may include a plurality of grooves 46 extending transversely through the major diameter portion 38 of the threaded portion as shown in
The major diameter portion 38 of the threaded portion, or the thread tip 38 may have a flat surface, an angled surface, an arcuate surface, or other shape as desired. The major diameter portion 38 may be tapered toward the leading flank, the trailing flank, or both, such as shown by alternative examples in
The presently disclosed fasteners may be made from low carbon steel, alloy steel, aluminum, brass, or other material as desired. The threaded fasteners may be made of a material selected as desired adapted to assemble parts made from materials selected from plastic, brass, aluminum, wood, concrete, steel, or other component materials.
Parameters for one application of the present disclosure is shown in
The failure torque is shown in Table 2. The failure torque was measured as the highest torque achieved before strip-out.
When the fasteners are used in an assembly application, it is typically desired to install the fasteners to a seating torque greater than the drive torque and less than the failure torque. Fasteners are often installed in commercial applications using automated drivers that may have variability from one screw installation to another. For this reason, it may be useful to provide a seating torque within a range of seating torques, or a seating torque window. A larger seating torque window may reduce strip-out failures by providing for greater variability of the screw driver.
To determine the seating torque window, an upper seating torque and lower seating torque are calculated. The upper seating torque is the mean failure torque minus three standard deviations of the failure torque data. The lower seating torque is the mean drive torque plus three standard deviations of the drive torque data. The seating torque is selected as the midpoint between the upper and lower seating torques. As shown in
The disclosed threaded fastener may comprise a threaded portion with a ratio of pitch diameter to minor diameter less than 1.28, and the threaded portion with a major diameter portion, a leading flank having a normal angle between 10° and 60°, a trailing flank having a normal angle between 1° and 30°, and a shank portion extending between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads of a arcuate surface having a radius greater than the thread height. The ratio between the axial length of the shank portion to thread height may be between 1.5 and 3.0.
The arcuate surface forming the shank portion of the threaded fastener may have a radius between 1.2 and 1.8 times the thread height.
The normal angle of the leading flank of the threaded portion may be greater than the normal angle of the trailing flank of the threaded portion. Alternatively, the normal angle of the leading flank of the threaded portion may be between 1.5 and 2.5 times the normal angle of the trailing flank of the threaded portion.
In one example of the disclosed threaded faster, the normal angle of the leading flank and the normal angle of the trailing flank are substantially the same. In yet another alternative, the normal angle of the leading flank and the normal angle of the trailing flank may be compound angles.
The threaded fastener is adapted to assemble parts made from materials selected from the group consisting of plastic, brass, aluminum, wood, concrete, and steel.
The threaded fastener may include a plurality of grooves extending transversely through the major diameter portion of the threaded portion. Alternatively, the threaded fastener may include a plurality of grooves extending transversely through the major diameter portion of adjacent threads of the threaded portion.
The major diameter portion of the threaded portion may be tapered toward the leading flank, the trailing flank, or both. Alternatively, the major diameter portion of the threaded portion is arcuate.
The threaded fastener may have at least one minor protrusion is formed along at least a portion of the shank portion of the threaded portions positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. The minor protrusion may be continuous along the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. Alternatively, the minor protrusion is intermittent along at least a portion of the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads.
If present, the minor protrusion may have a height not more than about 30% of the thread height. Alternatively, the height of the minor protrusion is not more than 20% of the thread height. At least a part of the minor protrusion may have a cross-sectional shape selected from the group consisting of arcuate, rectangular, elliptical, trapezoidal, and triangular. Additionally, a lead side of the minor protrusion may have a normal angle between about 10° and 60°.
Also disclosed is a threaded fastener comprising having a threaded portion with a major diameter portion, a leading flank having a normal angle between 1° and 60°, a trailing flank having a normal angle between 1° and 60°, and a shank portion extending between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads, and at least one minor protrusion formed along at least a portion of the shank portion of the threaded portions positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads.
The minor protrusion may be continuous along the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads. Alternatively, the minor protrusion is intermittent along at least a portion of the shank portion positioned between the trailing flank and the leading flank of adjacent threads.
The minor protrusion may have a height not more than about 30% of the thread height. Alternatively, the height of the minor protrusion is not more than 20% of the thread height. At least a part of the minor protrusion may have a cross-sectional shape selected from the group consisting of arcuate, rectangular, elliptical, trapezoidal, and triangular. Additionally, a lead side of the minor protrusion may have a normal angle between about 10° and 60°.
In one alternative, the leading flank of the threaded fastener may have a normal angle between about 10° and 60°, and the trailing flank may have a normal angle between about 1° and 30°.
This invention has been described with reference to illustrative embodiments and is not meant to be construed in a limiting sense. It will be apparent to one skilled in the art that elements or process steps from one or more embodiments described herein may be used in combination with elements or process steps from one or more other embodiments described herein, and that the present invention is not limited to the specific embodiments provided herein but only as set forth in the accompanying claims. Various modifications of the illustrative embodiments, as well as additional embodiments to the invention will be apparent to persons skilled in the art upon reference to this description.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
201007309 | Oct 2010 | SG | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
877131 | Jordan | Jan 1908 | A |
1229560 | Whiteman | Jun 1917 | A |
3207023 | Knohl | Sep 1965 | A |
3748949 | Dreger | Jul 1973 | A |
4040327 | Otaki | Aug 1977 | A |
4544313 | Grossberndt | Oct 1985 | A |
4652194 | Tajima et al. | Mar 1987 | A |
4842467 | Armstrong | Jun 1989 | A |
4854311 | Steffee | Aug 1989 | A |
4861210 | Frerejacques | Aug 1989 | A |
4907926 | Wing | Mar 1990 | A |
5425407 | Archuleta et al. | Jun 1995 | A |
5544993 | Härle | Aug 1996 | A |
5704750 | Bartos et al. | Jan 1998 | A |
5885041 | Giannuzzi et al. | Mar 1999 | A |
6095733 | Busby et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6113331 | Grossberndt et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6158939 | Grossberndt et al. | Dec 2000 | A |
6322307 | Glover | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6332741 | Janusz | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6375401 | McNeill | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6394726 | Garvick | May 2002 | B1 |
6565302 | Werner et al. | May 2003 | B2 |
6604901 | Gossberndt et al. | Aug 2003 | B1 |
6672813 | Kajita et al. | Jan 2004 | B1 |
6702537 | Neuhengen | Mar 2004 | B2 |
6722833 | Birkelbach | Apr 2004 | B2 |
7708738 | Fourcault et al. | May 2010 | B2 |
20100094352 | Iott et al. | Apr 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2754870 | Jun 1979 | DE |
0599211 | Jun 1994 | EP |
0948719 | Oct 1999 | EP |
1172572 | Jan 2002 | EP |
2002115442 | Apr 2002 | JP |
I226411 | Jan 2005 | TW |
I318667 | Dec 2009 | TW |
9905421 | Feb 1999 | WO |
2009101751 | Aug 2009 | WO |
Entry |
---|
Written Opinion of related PCT/SG2011/000345; Jan. 30, 2012. |
PCT International Search Report of related PCT/SG2011/000345; Jan. 30, 2012. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20120257945 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |