This application claims the benefit and priority of German Patent Application Serial No. 10 2011 053596.9, filed on Sep. 14, 2011, which is incorporated by reference herein.
The invention relates to a welding pin for the aligned joining of structural parts, having a shank that has a flange, on one side of the flange a welding end and on the other side of the flange a fastening section. The invention in addition relates to a joining arrangement for the aligned joining of structural parts, wherein a first structural part has at least one welding pin welded by a welding end to the first structural part, which has a shank projecting from the first structural part, a flange arranged on the shank, and on the free shank end a fastening section, and at some distance from the welding pin has a contact surface extending in the longitudinal direction of the welding pin for a second structural part and the second structural part has a fastening opening for accommodation of the welding pin, a supporting surface capable of being applied to the flange and at some distance from the fastening opening a seating surface cooperating with the contact surface.
In automobile construction welding pins, which are welded to a structural part and engage in openings of one or more additional structural parts, frequently are used for joining structural parts which are then fixed to the welding pin by means of nuts or the like for joining the parts. In such joining operations, the problem often exists that the structural parts being joined together must be aligned, so that after joining, they assume a specified end position. This alignment is required in order to be able to compensate for dimensional discrepancies of the parts produced in production and lying within the limit of manufacturing tolerances of the parts and the means for their connection. For example, complicated measurement techniques or gauges are used for alignment of the structural parts. Both may result in the lengthening of joining times and hence in higher production costs.
GB 2,065,011-A discloses a pin for welding to a structural part, which has a cylindrical shank and a cone-shaped foot, the end of which, of greater diameter, is provided with an annular welding surface. There, the cone-shaped foot has the task of enlarging the diameter of the welding surface, so as to give the welded joint greater strength.
The object of the invention is to procure a welding pin and a joining arrangement of the kind mentioned at the beginning, by which the alignment of structural parts being joined is simplified and the time required for joining is reduced. According to the invention, the welding pin for the aligned joining of structural parts has a shank that has a flange, on one side of the flange a welding end and on the other side of the flange a fastening section, while between the flange and the fastening section is arranged a conical section which tapers in the direction of the fastening section. The welding pin according to the invention has the advantage that, in the joining of such parts with the aid of its conical section, at least one structural part to be fastened can be aligned transverse to the longitudinal axis of the welding pin before it reaches its final fastening position on another structural part.
A joining arrangement according to the invention comprises a first structural part that has at least one welding pin welded by a welding end to the first structural part, which pin has a shank projecting from the first structural part, a flange arranged on the shank and, at the free shank end, a fastening section, and at some distance from the welding pin has a contact surface extending in the longitudinal direction of the welding pin for a second structural part, while the second structural part has a fastening opening for accommodation of the welding pin, a supporting surface capable of being applied to the flange and, at some distance from the fastening opening, a seating surface cooperating with the contact surface. The welding pin has adjacent to the side of the flange turned away from the welding end a conical section which tapers in the direction of the fastening section, and the fastening opening of the second structural part has on the supporting surface an inside diameter which corresponds to at least the greatest outside diameter of the conical section, and the second structural part has a region deformable by force, the deformation of which produces a reduction of the distance between the seating surface and the fastening opening.
The joining arrangement according to the invention has the advantage that mutual alignment of the structural parts to be joined takes place automatically upon assembly due to the conical section of the welding pin. Alignment with the aid of gauges or measurements and alignment by hand can be omitted. The risk of alignment errors in assembly is largely avoided. According to the invention, the slope of the conical section, i.e., the difference between the greatest and the smallest radius of the conical section, can be adapted to the maximum manufacturing tolerances that may occur at the distances between the welding pin and the contact surface, on the one hand, and between the fastening opening and the seating surface, on the other. The design of the conical section of the welding pin thus permits, in simple fashion, adaptation of the joining arrangement to the manufacturing tolerances present in each case.
The fastening section of the welding pin preferably is cylindrical and provided with an external thread. The second structural part can therefore be pressed into the alignment position along the conical section by a nut screwed onto the fastening section and then clamped between the nut and the flange. The force required in alignment for deformation of the second structural part can therefore be brought to bear indirectly by turning of the nut and requires no significant external force.
The welding pin preferably is welded to the first structural part so that the flange is arranged at some distance from the first structural part. Contact of the second structural part on the flange, which determines the fastening position of the second structural part on the welding pin, is thereby ensured. The seating surface of the second structural part can rest directly on the contact surface of the first structural part, but it may alternatively be provided that between the seating surface and the contact surface, there is arranged a section of a third structural part, which is inserted in the joining operation.
The invention will be explained in detail below with reference to an exemplary embodiment represented in the drawing, wherein:
The welding pin 1 shown in
For fastening of the second structural part 15 to the first structural part 12, the second part 15 is first roughly arranged with respect to the first part 12 and slipped by the opening 17 onto the welding pin 1, whereupon the seating surface 16 rests on the contact surface 14 and the element 18 comes into contact with the conical section 4. If, in connection with the permissible manufacturing tolerances, the distance between the contact surface 14 and the welding pin 1 has a maximum value and the distance between the seating surface 16 and the element 18 has a minimum value, the structural part 15 is able to reach all the way to contact on the flange 7 without significant force, while the conical section 4, by contact with the element 18, provides that the seating surface 16 also rests on the contact surface. If, on the contrary, the distance between the contact surface 14 and the welding pin 1 is smaller than the maximum value and/or the distance between the seating surface 16 and the element 18 is greater than the minimum value of the respective tolerance, the element 18 comes into contact with the conical section 4 before the structural part 15 with its supporting surface 19 reaches the flange 7. Then, with the aid of the nut 21 screwed onto the welding pin 1, the structural part 15 can be pressed downward against the resistance of the element 18 all the way to contact on the flange 7. The element 18 is thereby forced against its resistance with respect to the structural part 15 in the direction of the seating surface 16, whereupon the seating surface 16 is firmly pressed onto the contact surface 14. In both of the cases described, the conical section 4 of the welding pin 1 thus causes the second structural part 15 to be positioned in the desired fashion with respect to the first structural part 12 and fixing in the positioned position takes place.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1020110535969 | Sep 2011 | DE | national |