The present invention relates to a device for torque. A device of this type includes a nut, in particular having at least one female thread, and a holding element, the holding element including a top part having an entrainment profile in a rear area of the holding element for the rotatably fixed coupling of the top part with a setting tool, the holding element includes a receiving part having a receptacle, open toward the front, in a front area of the holding element, in which the nut is rotatably fixedly accommodated, and the holding element includes means for torque transmission from the top part to the receiving part, which connect the top part and the receiving part, the means for torque transmission breaking at a limiting torque, thereby interrupting the connection between the top part and the receiving part. The present invention also relates to a fastening arrangement made up of an expansion anchor and a device of this type for torque limiting and a method for manufacturing a device of this type.
A generic device for torque limiting is known from DE 102010043167 A1, which may be used in connection with expansion anchors and which has a predetermined breaking point, which breaks upon reaching a limiting torque. According to DE 102010043167 A1, the device includes means for the rotationally decoupled force transmission from the top part to the nut, so that the predetermined breaking point is preserved during hammering.
Another device for torque limiting is described in the international patent application having the PCT file number PCT/EP2016/072232 (now published as WO 2017050725 A1). This device includes at least one clamping element made from a plastic material for clamping the nut or the bolt head.
Other devices for torque limiting, which may be mounted on nuts or bolt heads, are known from FR 2598855 A1 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,215,600 A. According to U.S. Pat. No. 4,215,600 A, clamping projections formed as a single piece with the receiving part may be provided for the nut in the interior of the receiving part, which act laterally against the nut.
A screw having a multi-part head is derived from DE 102011106696 A1 which includes an outer sleeve, which is rotatable around an inner part of the head.
EP1353080 B1 shows a torque limiting element for expansion anchors.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a device for torque limiting, which ensures a particularly high reliability and, in particular, good handling capability with little complexity, in particular manufacturing complexity, in particular with respect to using the device in connection with expansion anchors, as well as to provide a corresponding fastening arrangement and a corresponding manufacturing method.
The present invention provides a device for torque limiting, a fastening arrangement and a method for manufacturing a device of this type.
A device according to the present invention for torque limiting is characterized in that the holding element includes at least one holding claw, which is situated on the receiving part, and which secures the nut in the receptacle on the front side of the nut.
The present invention is based on the finding that, when using devices for torque limiting in combination with expansion anchors, special load situations may occur, which under certain circumstances may result in reliability limitations in known devices. Expansion anchors are thus often mounted in so-called through-hole technology. In this type of assembly, the nut is already screwed onto the expansion anchor at the beginning of the assembly operation, and the expansion anchor, together with the screwed-on nut, is driven through an attachment part into a borehole with the aid of hammer blows applied to the back of the expansion anchor. Due to the non-negligible mass of the holding element of the device for torque limiting, inertial forces occur between the nut axially connected to the hammered-in anchor, on the one hand, and the holding element surrounding the nut, on the other hand, during the hammer blows. These inertial forces drive the nut forward out of the holding element and in extreme cases may result in the fact that the holding element of the device for torque limiting falls off the nut, so that no reliable limiting of the torque and no checking of the reaching of a setpoint torque is possible anymore. It has been demonstrated that this may occur under some circumstances despite existing clamping elements, since a normal clamping action is unable to withstand the forces occurring during hammer blows.
This is where the present invention comes in and provides one or multiple holding claws on the holding element, which secure the nut against the nut emerging on the front side from the receptacle of the receiving part, which is open toward the front. The at least one holding claw forms an obstacle against which the nut strikes on the front side and which holds the nut back in the receptacle. The nut is thus secured by the at least one holding claw on the front side of the nut in a form-fitting manner, i.e. through engagement. Compared to known clamping projections, which operate primarily based on friction and on the side of the nut, a particularly reliable securing is thus provided, which is also able to particularly reliably withstand the comparatively high forces which occur in connection with expansion anchors during hammer blows. A device for torque limiting is therefore particularly easily provided, which may also be reliably used in combination with expansion anchors and facilitates a particularly reliable checking of the reaching of a setpoint torque in this case as well. In contrast to clamping projections which act against the side walls of the nut and which form difficult to manufacture undercuts in a casting process, the holding claws acting against the front end face of the nut according to the present invention are also particularly easy to manufacture, preferably through non-metal-cutting forming of the blank from which the device for torque limiting is manufactured in particular by pressing the blank into a die. It may be provided, for example, to radially act upon the blank after the nut is placed into the receptacle by pressing it into a die on the receiving part in such a way that material of the blank flows radially inwardly and forms the holding claw. Finally, the connection obtained according to the present invention is particularly secure even in the case of premature stresses during transport, temperature fluctuations and/or under long-term effects.
In particular, the at least one holding claw may protrude radially inwardly from the receiving part and/or be situated axially in front of the receptacle for the nut, which is open toward the front. The at least one holding claw is preferably situated on the front side of the receiving part on the receiving part, which is advantageous from a manufacturing perspective. The at least one holding claw forms a front-side stop for the nut. The receptacle is, in particular, open toward the front to ensure an introduction of the nut from the front during manufacturing. In the finished device, however, the nut is no longer able to emerge from the receptacle toward the front, due to the at least one holding claw.
The direction indications of front, back, front-side, rear, etc. are to be used uniformly here. For example, the front side of the nut is thus situated in front of the back side of the nut in the same direction as the receiving part situated in the front area of the holding element is positioned with respect to the top part situated in the rear area of the holding element. In particular, the front side of the nut, on which the holding claws act against the nut, may be understood to be the side of the nut which is facing away from the top part.
To the extent that an axial direction and a radial direction are mentioned, they are to relate, in particular, to the same axis, which may be, in particular, a longitudinal axis and/or an axis of symmetry of the device, the top part, the receiving part, the entrainment profile, the receptacle and/or the expansion anchor, the axes of these elements preferably coinciding.
The nut may be, for example, a DIN nut. It has a through-opening with a female thread, which may be screwed, in particular, onto a threaded rod. The threaded rod may preferably be the shaft of an expansion anchor.
The entrainment profile is used for rotatably fixedly coupling the output side of the setting tool to the top part and, in particular, for applying a torque from the setting tool to the top part, in particular a torque directed in the axial direction. The entrainment profile may be, for example, an outer polygonal profile, in particular an outer hexagonal profile, which is situated on the circumferential side of the top part. The setting tool may be, for example, a wrench or a handheld power tool. The top part may preferably have a passage for a threaded rod, the passage opening into the receptacle for the nut, and the passage being open toward the rear. Accordingly, the threaded rod may pass through the device.
The receptacle may be, in particular, a recess formed in the holding element, into which the nut is placed. The receptacle is preferably delimited by the receiving part on the circumferential side and/or delimited by the top part on the rear side. The receiving part preferably forms a sleeve, which surrounds the receptacle and which thus also surrounds the nut, at least in areas. The nut is rotatably fixedly situated in the receptacle, in particular rotatably fixedly situated with the receiving part in the receptacle, i.e. a connection exists between the receiving part and the nut situated in the receptacle, preferably a form-fitting connection, which facilitates a transmission of a torque, in particular an axially directed torque, between the receiving part and the nut. The receptacle may preferably include another entrainment profile, for example an inner polygonal profile, in particular an inner hexagonal profile, for the rotatably fixed connection between the receiving part and the nut, which corresponds with an outer profile of the nut.
In particular, the device according to the present invention is designed in such a way that the means for torque transmission break preferentially at the limiting torque, interrupting the connection between the top part and the receiving part. Preferential breaking may be understood to mean, in particular, that the means for torque transmission break at a lower torque than the top part and the receiving part, so that the means for torque transmission form a predetermined breaking point.
The nut may be countersunk in the receiving part. However, the nut preferably protrudes at least a short distance forward beyond the receiving part. It is particularly preferred that the nut projects forward over the at least one holding claw. This makes it possible to particularly easily prevent the at least one holding claw from touching a part situated upstream from the device for torque limiting, for example an upstream washer. A particularly well defined friction behavior, in turn, may be obtained hereby which may be important, in particular with regard to the ratio between tightening moment and pretension. For the same reason, it may be advantageous, in particular, that the nut protrudes forward beyond the entire holding element.
It is particularly preferred that the holding claws and the receiving part have a monolithic design, a monolithic design being able to be understood, in particular, as a design having no joints. This may be advantageous with regard to the manufacturing complexity and reliability. For example, the at least one holding claw may be manufactured by easily deforming the receiving part.
It may advantageously be provided that the at least one holding claw and the receiving part are made from a metal casting material, in particular a metal die casting material. This may be advantageous, among other things, with regard to the manufacturing complexity. The means for torque transmission and/or the top part are also preferably metallic and preferably include a metal casting material, at least in areas. The receiving part, the means for torque transmission and at least part of the top part preferably have a monolithic design, which may further reduce the manufacturing complexity. The top part may also have a multi-part design and include a separate sleeve made from a ductile material, on which the entrainment profile is formed.
A single holding claw may generally be provided. This holding claw could also have a closed annular design for particularly good force transmission and completely surround the receptacle on the front side of the receptacle. It is particularly preferred that the holding element includes multiple, in particular separate, holding claws, which are situated on the receiving part, and which secure the nut in the receptacle on the front side of the nut. This may be advantageous for a particularly good force transmission. In addition, it may be advantageous with regard to the breaking precision of the device, namely in particular if the holding claws are manufactured by deforming the receiving part. In contrast to a design having a single, closed annular holding claw, separate holding claws may be situated in the circumferential direction, offset from the means for torque transmission, which may be designed as webs, and it may be particularly easily avoided that the means for torque transmission are prematurely stressed, namely during the manufacture of the holding claws, which could impair the breaking precision.
If multiple holding claws are provided, the features described here in connection with one holding claw preferably apply to all holding claws as well as to only part of the holding claws or only to one holding claw.
For example, three or six holding claws may be provided. It is particularly preferred that the receptacle has an inner polygonal profile, the number of holding claws preferably corresponding to the number of edges of the inner polygonal profile. In particular, it may be provided that at least part of the holding claws is situated in front of one edge of the inner polygonal profile in each case, in particular in a position overlapping the particular edge in the circumferential direction. Accordingly, the holding claws may act against the nut in the edge area of the nut, which may be particularly force-symmetrically and geometrically advantageous.
It is furthermore advantageous that the means for torque transmission are designed as at least one web, which connects the top part and the receiving part. This represents a particularly structurally simple and simultaneously reliable design. The means for torque transmission are preferably designed as webs, which connect the top part and the receiving part. The webs may form a predetermined breaking point, which breaks upon reaching the limiting torque. The webs may be arranged, in particular, around the longitudinal axis of the device. The webs preferably extend in the radial direction, at least in areas, which may be advantageous for the flux of force. With regard to the force symmetry, it may be advantageous that the webs are arranged equidistantly in the circumferential direction. The top part preferably has a smaller outer diameter than the receiving part, which may be advantageous, for example, with regard to the amount of material used.
It is particularly preferred that the receiving part has at least one wall thickness taper, which is situated in front of the at least one web, in particularly axially and/or in a position overlapping the web in the circumferential direction. In particular, the wall thickness taper may reach up to the front end face of the receiving part. This may contribute to relieving stress on the web of the means for torque transmission during the manufacture of the holding claws. If the holding claws are namely manufactured by front-side compression of the receiving part in a die, the wall thickness taper may cause the die to engage less firmly or not at all in this area, so that the web situated axially above is therefore subjected to comparatively less stress. If multiple webs are provided, a wall thickness taper is situated in front of each of the webs. For the purpose of relieving stress on the web, it may also be advantageous that the receiving part is recessed in an area situated axially in front of the web on the outside with respect to a circumference around the receiving part.
The top part suitably includes an axial stop, which forms a rear stop for the nut. This axial stop may be formed, for example, by projections or a ring, which protrudes on the top part. The axial stop may be situated, in particular, at a distance from the means for torque transmission, to avoid an axial stressing of these means, which, in the least favorable case, could result in the premature breakage of the means.
It is also advantageous that the nut is held axially without clearance by the at least one holding claw, and the nut is preferably accommodated without clearance between the axial stop and the at least one holding claw. This may be understood to mean that the nut abuts the axial stop and the at least one holding claw simultaneously, the former on the back side of the nut, the latter on the front side of the nut.
The clearance-free arrangement may avoid an undesirable relative movement of the nut in the holding element with corresponding acceleration forces and loads.
It is particularly preferred that the receiving part has at least one recess for a tool, in particular for a screwdriver blade, preferably on the end face. The receiving part may be lifted off the nut, overcoming the at least one holding claw, by introducing a tool into the recess and, for example, turning the screwdriver blade in the recess.
The invention also relates to a fastening arrangement made up of an expansion anchor and a device according to the present invention for torque limiting, the nut of the device being screwed onto the expansion anchor. An expansion anchor may be understood according to usual practice to be an anchor which includes an expansion element, in particular an expansion sleeve, which is offset radially to the outside for anchoring on the anchor.
The present invention also relates to a method for manufacturing a device according to the present invention for torque limiting, in which the at least one holding claw is manufactured by pressing the receiving part, in particular the front-side end of the receiving part, into a die. As already explained above, it may be provided, in particular, to radially act upon the blank after the nut is placed into the receptacle by pressing it into a die on the receiving part in such a way that material of the receptacle flows radially inwardly and forms the holding claw. The die may be, in particular, a die which tapers on the inside, at least in areas, preferably a die having a conical inner shape.
Features which are explained in connection with the devices according to the present invention for torque limiting may also be used in the fastening arrangements according to the present invention and in the manufacturing methods according to the present invention, and conversely features which are explained in connection with the fastening arrangements according to the present invention or the manufacturing methods according to the present invention may also be used in the devices according to the present invention for torque limiting.
The present invention is explained in greater detail below on the basis of preferred exemplary embodiments, which are represented schematically in the attached figures, it being possible, in principle, to implement individual features of the exemplary embodiments illustrated below individually or in an arbitrary combination within the scope of the present invention.
The views in
A receptacle 61, in which nut 30 is accommodated, is formed in receiving part 60. Receiving part 60 has an inner hexagonal profile on receptacle 61 for the form-fitting torque transmission from receiving part 60 to nut 30, which is apparent, in particular in
Top part 10 has an entrainment profile 12, designed for example as an outer hexagonal profile, with the aid of which a torque is transmittable from a setting tool, which is not illustrated, to top part 10 in a form-fitting manner. Receiving part 60 and top part 10 are arranged coaxially and define a shared longitudinal axis 99 of the device. Top part 10 has a passage 15, which is flush with receptacle 61 of receiving part 60, so that a threaded rod screwed into nut 30 may emerge from receiving part 60 on the back side of receiving part 60. Longitudinal axis 99 runs through receptacle 61 and passage 15.
As is apparent, in particular in
Holding element 1 also includes holding claws 66, which are situated on receiving part 60 on the front side of receiving part 60, i.e. on the side of receiving part 60 facing away from top part 10. These holding claws 66 form a front stop for nut 30 and limit a forward axial movement of nut 30 accommodated in receptacle 61 relative to top part 10. In the illustrated exemplary embodiment, examples of a total of six holding claws 66 are provided, one each per edge of the inner hexagonal profile of receptacle 61. As illustrated, in particular in
Nut 30 is preferably held axially without clearance between axial stop 51, on the one hand, and holding claws 66, on the other hand, i.e. nut 30 simultaneously abuts axial stop 51 on the back and at least one of holding claws 66 on the front.
Holding claws 66 are monolithically formed together with receiving part 60. Receiving part 60, top part 10, webs 43 and/or holding claws 66 include a metallic material.
In the fastening arrangement in
During mounting, expansion anchor 80 of the fastening arrangement is hammered into a borehole with the aid of hammer blows onto the back side of shaft 81. Holding claws 66 ensure that nut 30 screwed onto shaft 81 remains in holding element 1 despite the inertia of holding element 1.
A torque is thus applied to top part 10 via entrainment profile 12 with the aid of a setting tool. This torque is transmitted to receiving part 60 via webs 43 and from receiving part 60 on to nut 30. This, in turn, induces a tensile force in shaft 81 of expansion anchor 80, which, in turn, radially stresses expansion element 89 and thereby anchors expansion anchor 80.
If the torque applied to top part 10 reaches a predetermined limiting torque, webs 43 shear off, resulting in the fact that top part 10 separates from receiving part 60 and torque is no longer transmitted to receiving part 60 and nut 30. The device for torque limiting therefore acts as a torque-limiting shear nut. After webs 43 shear off, top part 10 is separated from receiving part 60 and falls off receiving part 60.
As is apparent, in particular in
The device for torque limiting has recesses 78 on the front end face of its receiving part 60. For example, a screwdriver or another tool may be inserted thereinto for the purpose of lifting receiving part 60 off of nut 30 by overcoming holding claws 66, should this be necessary, in particular, after top part 10 shears off of receiving part 60.
The manufacture of the device for torque limiting according to the first specific embodiment is illustrated schematically in
As illustrated, in particular in
Differences between the two specific embodiments exist, in particular, in the shape of holding claws 66 and their manufacturing method. As illustrated, in particular in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
17150335 | Jan 2017 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP2017/081493 | 12/5/2017 | WO | 00 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2018/127338 | 12/7/2018 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
1380395 | Korach | Jun 1921 | A |
2394812 | Seitz | Feb 1946 | A |
3370341 | Allsop | Feb 1968 | A |
3444775 | Hills | May 1969 | A |
3482864 | Bynum | Dec 1969 | A |
3728933 | Grube et al. | Apr 1973 | A |
3742583 | Devlin | Jul 1973 | A |
3978761 | Sosinski | Sep 1976 | A |
4046052 | Nordstrom | Sep 1977 | A |
4215600 | Kesselmann et al. | Aug 1980 | A |
4729703 | Sato | Mar 1988 | A |
5865581 | Sadri | Feb 1999 | A |
6176659 | Hardt | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6406240 | Potter | Jun 2002 | B1 |
9194417 | Marchand et al. | Nov 2015 | B2 |
9316248 | Appl et al. | Apr 2016 | B2 |
9970467 | Dijkhuis et al. | May 2018 | B2 |
10584731 | Gstach et al. | Mar 2020 | B2 |
20020076295 | Gibbons | Jun 2002 | A1 |
20030198528 | Onishi et al. | Oct 2003 | A1 |
20040226419 | Morgan | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20120328388 | Hardt | Dec 2012 | A1 |
20130303293 | Eckstein et al. | Nov 2013 | A1 |
20150226248 | Robertson, Jr. | Aug 2015 | A1 |
20160053792 | Rosenkranz et al. | Feb 2016 | A1 |
20160305464 | Balderrama | Oct 2016 | A1 |
20170343026 | Schaeffer | Nov 2017 | A1 |
20190331154 | Shimahara | Oct 2019 | A1 |
20190338796 | Shimahara | Nov 2019 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
2009200994 | Nov 2009 | AU |
202914489 | May 2013 | CN |
103180623 | Jun 2013 | CN |
203230709 | Sep 2013 | CN |
105190058 | Dec 2015 | CN |
105556138 | May 2016 | CN |
105705804 | Jun 2016 | CN |
105829735 | Aug 2016 | CN |
102010042260 | Apr 2012 | DE |
102010043167 | May 2012 | DE |
102011106696 | Jan 2013 | DE |
1353080 | Oct 2003 | EP |
2952755 | Aug 2020 | EP |
2598855 | Jan 1987 | ER |
1330320 | Nov 1987 | GB |
S4520582 | Aug 1970 | JP |
H0685918 | Dec 1994 | JP |
2000257623 | Sep 2000 | JP |
2001140832 | May 2001 | JP |
2012105535 | Aug 2013 | RU |
WO2011007052 | Jan 2011 | WO |
WO2017050725 | Mar 2017 | WO |
WO2018127336 | Jul 2018 | WO |
WO2018127337 | Jul 2018 | WO |
Entry |
---|
International Search Report of PCT/EP2017/081493, dated Mar. 3, 2018. |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20190338800 A1 | Nov 2019 | US |