US2441790A - Dimpling apparatus - Google Patents

Dimpling apparatus Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2441790A
US2441790A US537078A US53707844A US2441790A US 2441790 A US2441790 A US 2441790A US 537078 A US537078 A US 537078A US 53707844 A US53707844 A US 53707844A US 2441790 A US2441790 A US 2441790A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
countersink
coining
punch
dimple
face
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US537078A
Inventor
Frank B Bolte
Philip B Keller
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US537078A priority Critical patent/US2441790A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2441790A publication Critical patent/US2441790A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B21MECHANICAL METAL-WORKING WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21DWORKING OR PROCESSING OF SHEET METAL OR METAL TUBES, RODS OR PROFILES WITHOUT ESSENTIALLY REMOVING MATERIAL; PUNCHING METAL
    • B21D22/00Shaping without cutting, by stamping, spinning, or deep-drawing
    • B21D22/02Stamping using rigid devices or tools
    • B21D22/04Stamping using rigid devices or tools for dimpling

Definitions

  • a still further object is to provide a process of dimpling material which. prevents stretching, thinnin or cracking of the work material when dimpling or countersinking same, and especially when using hard alloys.
  • Our invention also has for its objects to provide tion and easily disconnected therefrom, economical of manufacture, relatively simple, and of general superiority and servlceability.
  • Fig. 1 is a vertical section, partly in elevation, showing'a dimpling setat the beginning of the dimpling operation in the present process, I
  • Fig. 2 is a view similar to Fig. 1, but showing the dimpling set at the end of the dimpling operation.
  • I Fig. 6 is a vertical, broken section through a modified construction of a dimpling set.
  • FIG. 7 is a sectional view of work material after it has been drilled but before it has been dimpled.
  • Fig. 8 is a sectional view of the work material at an intermediate point in the present process.
  • Fig. 9 is a sectionalview of the completed work materiaL- Referring more in detail to thedrawings, the reference number! generally designates a dimpling die used in carrying out ourpro'cess.
  • the die has a cavity 8 therein in which reciprocates a pressure ram 9.
  • An elastic ram return I0 is disposed in the cavity 8 between the ram 9 and the opposed face l2 or a plu l8, which is pinned in the lower open end of the die 1.
  • the pin is illustrated at l4.
  • the plug l3 has a depending finger l5 for insertion in a bed of a press (not shown).
  • the normally upper shoulder l6 of the pressure ram 9 is tapered and shaped to conform with the internally tapering face I! in the die I.
  • the pad l0 tends to move the ram 9 upwardly in Fig. 1, to seat the shoulder 16 against the tapering face I'I.
  • the ram 9 hasa depending pin l8 that reciprocates in a recess IS in the plug I 3. Projecting upwardly from the shouldered end IS, the ram 9 has a head 20 provided with a coining face 2
  • the pilot 22 reciprocates in a recess 23 in a dimpling punch 24.
  • the pilot 22 tends to maintain the dimpling punch and dimpling die in alinement with each other.
  • the punch 24 also has a finger 25 for engagement with the actuating head (not shown) of the press.
  • the die 1 has a countersink 28 centrally located with respect to a slightly downwardly inclined surrounding face 29.
  • the face 29 preferably is disposed at a slight angle downward from the countersink 28, such as at a two degree (2 deg.)
  • the punch 24 has a downwardly depending pressure ring 30 of the same contour as the countersink 28.
  • Fig. 6 illustrates a construction in which the pilot 32 is mounted in a downward direction upon the pressure ring 33 of the dimpling punch 31.
  • the recess 34 for the pilot is, moreover, in the head 35 of the ram 36.
  • the die I and punch 31 are otherwise similar to the corresponding parts in Figs. 1 and 2.
  • the work material 26 is first drilledwith an undersized bore 2'! that is smaller in diameter than the bore 4
  • the bored work material 26 is inserted between the punch 24 and die I, with the pilot 22 engaging the bore 21, as shown in Fig, l.
  • Downward driving action upon the punch 24 causes the pressure ring 30 to downwardly dimple the work material, as indicated at 3
  • Downward dimpling of the material around the bore 21 is yieldingly resisted by the coining face 2
  • Downward movement or the ram 9 is progressively resisted by the resilient pad I0.
  • (indicated by the, broken lines 40 in Figs. 2 and 8) is extruded outwardly from the hole 21 by reason of the pilot 22 preventing inward extrusion of the material, thereby effecting the present coining operation.
  • the extruded material cold flows back up the incline, between the pressure ring 30 and the countersink 28, thus counteracting the tendency to thin at the bend 38 and maintaining the same angularity, top and bottom, on the material.
  • the excess material provided by the undersized hole 21 is utilized to maintain said results.
  • the thinned portion I9 is drilled out leaving the finished bore ll through the dimple 3
  • the slight downward angle of the face 29 permits a slight spring back of the material. This gives a small amount of coining action to the sheet adjacent the dimple. It also relieves tension stresses on the upper surfaces of the sheet, thereby insuring a clean, sharp dimple.
  • the finished dimple has a flat undersurface 43, to provide a bearing surface for the upset end of a rivet.
  • the present dimpling tools maybe used in either squeeze type machines or with portable guns and bucking bars. What is necessary is that the inertia of the dimpling die and pressure ram, combined with the yielding resistance of the ram return cushion 10, be of sumcient magnitude to effect coining.
  • Fig. 2 illustrates how, in the final stage of operation, the pin I! may bottom against the plug l3 in order to change the resistance of the ram 9 from a yielding to an unyielding resistance, thereby increasing the coining pressure applied by the coining face for the final stage of coining in which the entire area of the dimple is coined.
  • the bottoming maybe attained by providing for the resistance of the cushion ill to increase to a substantially unyielding magnitude (as by having the cushion deform to the point of substantially filling the cavity containing it).
  • An apparatus for forming dimples around an opening comprising a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, a member operable axially through and relatively to said countersink and provided with a coining face and a pilot, compression means resisting the relativ movement of said member, and a frusto-conical punch substantially equal in dimension to said countersink, said punch operable to compress material about said pilot and cause it to flow into said countersink to coin a dimple. with a wall of uniform thickness and flattened at the bottom, said punch having a bore axially alined with said pilot to receive same during the dimple forming operation.
  • An apparatus for forming dimples around an opening comprising a die element having a 75 frusto-conical countersink, a member within said bottom of said countersink, and a complementary die element comprising a frusto-conical compression member equal in dimension to the countersink in said first-named die element, said compression member operable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and against said coining face to coin a dimple in the material.
  • a resilient means for applying yielding pressure the combination of: a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, an element reciprocable in said die element, having a head coaxial with said countersink and formed with a coinin face, said resilient means engaging said headed element, normally to hold said head projected above the bottom of said countersink, a complementary die element having a frusto-conical punch and, at the end of said punch an annular coining face opposed to the first-mentioned coining face, one of the coining face bearing elements having a pilot projecting axially from the coining face thereof and adapted to pass through a perforation in a sheet of material to be dimpled and be received in a bore in the other coining face bearing element, said punch being operable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and between said coining faces to coin a dimple in the material.
  • Apparatus for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of metal comprising a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, an element operable axially through and relative to said countersink and provided with a coining face, yielding means confined within said die element and engaged between said die element and said axially operable member, and a cooperating die element having a frusto-conical punch that is provided at its end with a coining face opposed to the coining face of said axially operable element, one of the coining face bearing elements having a pilot projecting axially therefrom and the other of the coining face bearing elements having a bore to receive said pilot, said punch being operable to compress the material about said pilot and cause it to flow into said countersink to coin a dimple that is flattened at the bottom.
  • Apparatus for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material comprising a female die element having a frusto-conical countersink and having, surrounding said countersink-an end face that is convexly frusto-conical, with a high area thereof immediately adjacent the countersink providing a coining shoulder, and a male die element having a frusto-conical punch conforming in shape, angularity and dimension to the countersink and having, surrounding said punch, a substantially flat end surface, said die elements being cooperable to coin in the area of said sheet surrounding said opening, a dimple having a wall of uniform thickness merging with said sheet through a sharply defined angle whereby dimples of stacked sheets will nest with each other.
  • one of said die elements has a pilot and the other of ing a coining face, means yieldingly acting against said reciprocable element, to hold said coining face normally projected above the bottom of said countersink, and a complementary die element having a frusto-conical punch conforming in dimensions and shape to the countersink, one of the two last mentioned elements having a pilot projecting axially therefrom and adapted to pass through said opening and be received in a bore in the other of said two elements, said punch beingoperable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and against said coining face whereby to effect coining of the entire area of the material embraced between said punch and countersink to produce therein a fully coined dimple adapted to fully nest with a like dimple in another sheet.
  • a machine for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material including resilient means: the combination of a female die element having a frusto-conical countersink and having, surrounding said countersink, an end surface that is convexly frusto-conical, with a high area thereof immediately adjacent the countersink providing a coining shoulder, and a male die element having a frustoconical punch conforming in shape and dimen sions to the countersink and having, surrounding said punch, a substantially flat end surface diverging outwardly with reference to said frustoconical surface, and an element reciprocable axially in said countersink and having an exposed end providing a coining face, normally projected above the bottom of said countersink, for yieldingly engaging the sheet immediately adjacent said opening and applying pressure thereto in an initial stage of operation of the machine,
  • a machine for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material including resilient means: the combination of a female die element having a frusto-conical countersink and having, surrounding saidcountersink, an end surface that is convexly frustoconical, with a high area thereof immediately adjacent the countersink providing a, coining shoulder, a male die element having a frusto-- conical punch conforming in shape, angularity and dimensions to the countersink and having, surrounding said punch, a substantially flatend surface that divergesoutwardly from said end surface, and an element reciprocable in said countersink, having a head coaxial with said countersink and formed with'a coining face normally projected above the bottom of the countersink to yieldingly engage the area of said sheet immediately adjacent said opening and apply pressure thereto in an initial stage of operation of the machine, and arranged to receive yieldin ressure from said resilient means, one of said elements having a pilot projecting axially from the coining face thereof
  • Means for forming a dimple around a hole in sheet material comprising a male die having a projecting die face, a female die element having a die recess complementary to said projecting die face, a tubular gripping member movably mounted in said female die having an outer end disposed in the mid-portion of, and having a smaller transverse dimension than, said recess, said gripping member being adapted to engage the sheet material immediately adjacent to said hole, and resilient means for urging said outer end of said gripping member out of said recess.
  • a resilient means for applying yielding pressure the combination of: a male die said gripping member beingadapted to engage the sheet material immediately adjacent to said hole, and being arranged to transmit yielding pressure from-said resilient means to said sheet material, the outer end of said gripping member being normally urged out of said recess by said bination oi: a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, an element reciprocal axially in said countersink and having an exposed coining face, normally projected above the-bottom of said countersink for yieldingly engaging the sheet immediately adjacent said opening and applying pressure thereto in an initial stage of operationof the machine, said element being arranged to receive yielding pressure from said resilient means, and a complementary die element having a frusto-conical punch conforming in dimensions and shape to the countersink, one of the two last mentioned elements having a pilot projecting axially therefrom and adapted to pass through said opening and
  • FRANK B BOLTE.
  • PHILIP B KELLER.

Description

F. B. BOLTE ETAL DIMPLING APPARATUS Filed May 24, 1944 Patented May f DIMPLIN G APPARATUS Frank B. Bolte, Los Angeles, and Philip B. Keller, Santa Monica, Calif; said Bolte assignor to said Keller Application May 24, 1944, Serial No. 537,078
16 Claims. (01. Isa-21) rial,'so as to be able to nest or mate'dimpled sheets, one within the other.
A still further object is to provide a process of dimpling material which. prevents stretching, thinnin or cracking of the work material when dimpling or countersinking same, and especially when using hard alloys.
Our invention also has for its objects to provide tion and easily disconnected therefrom, economical of manufacture, relatively simple, and of general superiority and servlceability. Y
The invention also comprises novel details of construction and novel combinations and arrangements of parts, which will more fully appear in the course of the following description. However, the drawings merely show and the following description merely describes embodiments of the present invention, which are givenby way of 11- lustration or example only.
In the drawings, like reference characters designate similar parts in the several views.
Fig. 1 is a vertical section, partly in elevation, showing'a dimpling setat the beginning of the dimpling operation in the present process, I
Fig. 2 is a view similar to Fig. 1, but showing the dimpling set at the end of the dimpling operation.
Figs. 3, 4, and arecross-sectional views taken on the lines 4-4 and 5-5 respectively of Fig. 2, looking'in the direction of the arrows.
I Fig. 6 is a vertical, broken section through a modified construction of a dimpling set.
such means that are positive in operation, c'onvenient in use, easily installed in a working posi- Fig. 7 is a sectional view of work material after it has been drilled but before it has been dimpled.
Fig. 8 is a sectional view of the work material at an intermediate point in the present process.
Fig. 9 is a sectionalview of the completed work materiaL- Referring more in detail to thedrawings, the reference number! generally designates a dimpling die used in carrying out ourpro'cess. The die has a cavity 8 therein in which reciprocates a pressure ram 9. An elastic ram return I0 is disposed in the cavity 8 between the ram 9 and the opposed face l2 or a plu l8, which is pinned in the lower open end of the die 1. The pin, is illustrated at l4. The plug l3 has a depending finger l5 for insertion in a bed of a press (not shown). The normally upper shoulder l6 of the pressure ram 9, is tapered and shaped to conform with the internally tapering face I! in the die I. The pad l0 tends to move the ram 9 upwardly in Fig. 1, to seat the shoulder 16 against the tapering face I'I.
The ram 9 hasa depending pin l8 that reciprocates in a recess IS in the plug I 3. Projecting upwardly from the shouldered end IS, the ram 9 has a head 20 provided with a coining face 2| in the central portion of which upwardly extends a pilot 22. The pilot 22 reciprocates in a recess 23 in a dimpling punch 24. The pilot 22 tends to maintain the dimpling punch and dimpling die in alinement with each other. The punch 24 also has a finger 25 for engagement with the actuating head (not shown) of the press.
The die 1 has a countersink 28 centrally located with respect to a slightly downwardly inclined surrounding face 29. The face 29 preferably is disposed at a slight angle downward from the countersink 28, such as at a two degree (2 deg.)
angle. The punch 24 has a downwardly depending pressure ring 30 of the same contour as the countersink 28.
Fig. 6 illustrates a construction in which the pilot 32 is mounted in a downward direction upon the pressure ring 33 of the dimpling punch 31. The recess 34 for the pilot is, moreover, in the head 35 of the ram 36. In Fig. 6, the die I and punch 31 are otherwise similar to the corresponding parts in Figs. 1 and 2. v
In carrying out our present process, the work material 26 is first drilledwith an undersized bore 2'! that is smaller in diameter than the bore 4| in-the finished product.
The bored work material 26 is inserted between the punch 24 and die I, with the pilot 22 engaging the bore 21, as shown in Fig, l. Downward driving action upon the punch 24 causes the pressure ring 30 to downwardly dimple the work material, as indicated at 3|. Downward dimpling of the material around the bore 21 is yieldingly resisted by the coining face 2| on the head 20. Downward movement or the ram 9 is progressively resisted by the resilient pad I0. I
Downward dimpling of the work material would ordinarily cause a stretching and thinning of the material at the bend 38 and cause different angularity on the top and bottom of the work material. To prevent this in the present process,
the material 39 between the lower end of the pressure ring 30 and the opposed portion of the coining face 2| (indicated by the, broken lines 40 in Figs. 2 and 8) is extruded outwardly from the hole 21 by reason of the pilot 22 preventing inward extrusion of the material, thereby effecting the present coining operation. As a result, the extruded material cold flows back up the incline, between the pressure ring 30 and the countersink 28, thus counteracting the tendency to thin at the bend 38 and maintaining the same angularity, top and bottom, on the material. The excess material provided by the undersized hole 21 is utilized to maintain said results.
Then to complete the dimple 3|, the thinned portion I9 is drilled out leaving the finished bore ll through the dimple 3|. The slight downward angle of the face 29 permits a slight spring back of the material. This gives a small amount of coining action to the sheet adjacent the dimple. It also relieves tension stresses on the upper surfaces of the sheet, thereby insuring a clean, sharp dimple. Moreover, the finished dimple has a flat undersurface 43, to provide a bearing surface for the upset end of a rivet.
It is believed clear without further illustration that the present dimpling tools maybe used in either squeeze type machines or with portable guns and bucking bars. What is necessary is that the inertia of the dimpling die and pressure ram, combined with the yielding resistance of the ram return cushion 10, be of sumcient magnitude to effect coining.
Fig. 2 illustrates how, in the final stage of operation, the pin I! may bottom against the plug l3 in order to change the resistance of the ram 9 from a yielding to an unyielding resistance, thereby increasing the coining pressure applied by the coining face for the final stage of coining in which the entire area of the dimple is coined. Obviously, the bottoming maybe attained by providing for the resistance of the cushion ill to increase to a substantially unyielding magnitude (as by having the cushion deform to the point of substantially filling the cavity containing it).
It is believed clear without further explanation, that the process utilizing the tool of Fig. 6 is similar to that just described.
While we have illustrated and described what we now regard as the preferred embodiments of our invention, the constructions are, of course, subject to modifications without departing from the spirit and scope of our invention. We, therefore, do not wish to restrict ourselves to the particular forms of construction illustrated and described, but desire to avail ourselves of all modifications that may fall within the scope of the appended claims.
Having thus described our invention, what we claim and desire to secure by Letters Patent is:
1. An apparatus for forming dimples around an opening, comprising a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, a member operable axially through and relatively to said countersink and provided with a coining face and a pilot, compression means resisting the relativ movement of said member, and a frusto-conical punch substantially equal in dimension to said countersink, said punch operable to compress material about said pilot and cause it to flow into said countersink to coin a dimple. with a wall of uniform thickness and flattened at the bottom, said punch having a bore axially alined with said pilot to receive same during the dimple forming operation.
2. An apparatus for forming dimples around an opening, comprising a die element having a 75 frusto-conical countersink, a member within said bottom of said countersink, and a complementary die element comprising a frusto-conical compression member equal in dimension to the countersink in said first-named die element, said compression member operable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and against said coining face to coin a dimple in the material.
3. In a machine for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material, in which machine there is embodied a resilient means for applying yielding pressure, the combination of: a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, an element reciprocable in said die element, having a head coaxial with said countersink and formed with a coinin face, said resilient means engaging said headed element, normally to hold said head projected above the bottom of said countersink, a complementary die element having a frusto-conical punch and, at the end of said punch an annular coining face opposed to the first-mentioned coining face, one of the coining face bearing elements having a pilot projecting axially from the coining face thereof and adapted to pass through a perforation in a sheet of material to be dimpled and be received in a bore in the other coining face bearing element, said punch being operable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and between said coining faces to coin a dimple in the material.
4. Apparatus for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of metal, comprising a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, an element operable axially through and relative to said countersink and provided with a coining face, yielding means confined within said die element and engaged between said die element and said axially operable member, and a cooperating die element having a frusto-conical punch that is provided at its end with a coining face opposed to the coining face of said axially operable element, one of the coining face bearing elements having a pilot projecting axially therefrom and the other of the coining face bearing elements having a bore to receive said pilot, said punch being operable to compress the material about said pilot and cause it to flow into said countersink to coin a dimple that is flattened at the bottom.
5. Apparatus for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material, comprising a female die element having a frusto-conical countersink and having, surrounding said countersink-an end face that is convexly frusto-conical, with a high area thereof immediately adjacent the countersink providing a coining shoulder, and a male die element having a frusto-conical punch conforming in shape, angularity and dimension to the countersink and having, surrounding said punch, a substantially flat end surface, said die elements being cooperable to coin in the area of said sheet surrounding said opening, a dimple having a wall of uniform thickness merging with said sheet through a sharply defined angle whereby dimples of stacked sheets will nest with each other.
6. Apparatus as defined in claim 5, wherein one of said die elements has a pilot and the other of ing a coining face, means yieldingly acting against said reciprocable element, to hold said coining face normally projected above the bottom of said countersink, and a complementary die element having a frusto-conical punch conforming in dimensions and shape to the countersink, one of the two last mentioned elements having a pilot projecting axially therefrom and adapted to pass through said opening and be received in a bore in the other of said two elements, said punch beingoperable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and against said coining face whereby to effect coining of the entire area of the material embraced between said punch and countersink to produce therein a fully coined dimple adapted to fully nest with a like dimple in another sheet.
8. In-a machine for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material, including resilient means: the combination of a female die element having a frusto-conical countersink and having, surrounding said countersink, an end surface that is convexly frusto-conical, with a high area thereof immediately adjacent the countersink providing a coining shoulder, and a male die element having a frustoconical punch conforming in shape and dimen sions to the countersink and having, surrounding said punch, a substantially flat end surface diverging outwardly with reference to said frustoconical surface, and an element reciprocable axially in said countersink and having an exposed end providing a coining face, normally projected above the bottom of said countersink, for yieldingly engaging the sheet immediately adjacent said opening and applying pressure thereto in an initial stage of operation of the machine,
and arranged to receive yielding pressure from said resilient means, said elements being cooperable to coin in the area of said sheet surrounding said opening, a dimple having a wall of uniform thickness merging with said sheet through a sharply defined angle whereby dimples of stacked sheets will nest with each other.
9. In a machine for forming a dimple around an opening in a sheet of coinable material, including resilient means: the combination of a female die element having a frusto-conical countersink and having, surrounding saidcountersink, an end surface that is convexly frustoconical, with a high area thereof immediately adjacent the countersink providing a, coining shoulder, a male die element having a frusto-- conical punch conforming in shape, angularity and dimensions to the countersink and having, surrounding said punch, a substantially flatend surface that divergesoutwardly from said end surface, and an element reciprocable in said countersink, having a head coaxial with said countersink and formed with'a coining face normally projected above the bottom of the countersink to yieldingly engage the area of said sheet immediately adjacent said opening and apply pressure thereto in an initial stage of operation of the machine, and arranged to receive yieldin ressure from said resilient means, one of said elements having a pilot projecting axially from the coining face thereof, and adapted to pass through said opening and'be received in a bore in another of said elements, said punch being operable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and between said coining faces to coin a dimple in the material.
10. Means for forming a dimple around a hole in sheet material comprising a male die having a projecting die face, a female die element having a die recess complementary to said projecting die face, a tubular gripping member movably mounted in said female die having an outer end disposed in the mid-portion of, and having a smaller transverse dimension than, said recess, said gripping member being adapted to engage the sheet material immediately adjacent to said hole, and resilient means for urging said outer end of said gripping member out of said recess.
11. Dimple forming means as defined in claim 10, wherein said female die element has a cavity of greater diameter than said tubular gripping member, a bore in which said shoulder is slidable. and anofl-set shoulder between said bore and the lateral wall of said cavity; wherein said tubular gripping member has an enlarged head reciprocable in said cavity and adapted to engage said shoulder to limit the projection of the gripping member; and wherein said resilient means comprises a yielding cushion of material having the characteristics of rubber, disposed within said cavity and engaged under compression between said female die element and said head.
12. Dimpl forming means as defined in claim 10, wherein said female die element has a cavity of larger diameter than said gripping member, a bore in which said gripping member is slidable, and an off-set shoulder connecting the lateral wall of said cavity to'said bore; wherein said gripping member has an enlarged head reciprocable in said cavity and a stem that is slidable in a bore in the end of said female die element and adapted to bottom in said bore so as to provide unyielding resistance at the end of the relative movement of the die elements; and wherein said resilient means comprises an annular cushion of yielding material having the characteristics of rubber, disposed within said cavity between said head and the bottom of said female die element, said stem passing through said annular cushion and the periphery of said annular cushion being normally spaced from the lateral wall of said cavity.
13. In a machine for forming a dimple around a hole in sheet material, in which machine there is embodied a resilient means for applying yielding pressure, the combination of: a male die said gripping member beingadapted to engage the sheet material immediately adjacent to said hole, and being arranged to transmit yielding pressure from-said resilient means to said sheet material, the outer end of said gripping member being normally urged out of said recess by said bination oi: a die element having a frusto-conical countersink, an element reciprocal axially in said countersink and having an exposed coining face, normally projected above the-bottom of said countersink for yieldingly engaging the sheet immediately adjacent said opening and applying pressure thereto in an initial stage of operationof the machine, said element being arranged to receive yielding pressure from said resilient means, and a complementary die element having a frusto-conical punch conforming in dimensions and shape to the countersink, one of the two last mentioned elements having a pilot projecting axially therefrom and adapted to pass through said opening and be received in a bore in the other of said two elements, said punch being operable to compress the material about said pilot into said countersink and against said coining face whereby to effect coining of the entire area of the material embraced between said punch and countersink to produce therein a, fully coined dimple adapted to fully mesh with a like dimple in an under sheet.
16; A machine as defined in claim 15, including so means against which said reciprocal element is arranged to bottom in order to provide substantially unyielding resistance to pressure exerted through the sheet, in a final stage of operation of. the machine.
FRANK B. BOLTE. PHILIP B, KELLER.
REFERENCES CITED UNITED STATES PATENTS Number Name I Date 2,114,289 Draim Apr. 19, 1938 2,288,378 Veit June 30, 1942 2,292,446 Huck Aug. 11, 1942 2,302,772 Huck Nov. 24, 1942 2,333,418 Fischer Nov. 2, 1843 2,348,875 Beard May 16. 1944 2,356,526 Mayer et a1 Aug. 22, 1944 2,365,918 Tuttle Dec. 26, 1946 2,418,736 Styes Apr. 8, 1947 FOREIGN PATENTS Number Country Date- 155,204 Great Britain Jan, 12, 1922 454,733 Great Britain Octgl, 1936 485,405 Great Britain May 118, 1938
US537078A 1944-05-24 1944-05-24 Dimpling apparatus Expired - Lifetime US2441790A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US537078A US2441790A (en) 1944-05-24 1944-05-24 Dimpling apparatus

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US537078A US2441790A (en) 1944-05-24 1944-05-24 Dimpling apparatus

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2441790A true US2441790A (en) 1948-05-18

Family

ID=24141102

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US537078A Expired - Lifetime US2441790A (en) 1944-05-24 1944-05-24 Dimpling apparatus

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2441790A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2627766A (en) * 1947-07-25 1953-02-10 Engineering & Res Corp Anvil and stripper for punching and riveting machines
US2738575A (en) * 1952-11-10 1956-03-20 Zephyr Mfg Company Apparatus for and method of dimpling work sheets
US2834234A (en) * 1954-05-25 1958-05-13 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Coin dimpling apparatus
US2864427A (en) * 1954-06-04 1958-12-16 North American Aviation Inc Dimpling apparatus having a resiliently supported ram
DE2617231A1 (en) * 1975-04-21 1976-11-04 Ferco Int Usine Ferrures METHOD OF MANUFACTURING PLUNGER HOLES
US4481003A (en) * 1980-01-18 1984-11-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Method of producing itegral electrode structure for electron gun
US6351980B1 (en) * 1997-09-16 2002-03-05 Crown Cork & Seal Technologies Corporation Base forming
US20130152656A1 (en) * 2011-12-19 2013-06-20 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Thin plate burring processing method and thin plate female screw-forming method

Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US485405A (en) * 1892-11-01 Lathe-dog
GB155204A (en) * 1919-09-12 1922-01-12 Reinhold Bauhof Method of and joint for rivetting power-transmitting steel bands
GB454733A (en) * 1935-06-04 1936-10-07 May Claude Hector Improvements relating to rivetted joints
US2114289A (en) * 1935-11-02 1938-04-19 Nicholas A Draim Low drag, corrosion resisting connection and method of forming same
US2288378A (en) * 1941-07-16 1942-06-30 Glenn L Martin Co Dimpling tool
US2292446A (en) * 1940-04-01 1942-08-11 Huck Mfg Co Apparatus and method for riveting airplane structures or the like
US2302772A (en) * 1940-08-12 1942-11-24 Huck Mfg Co Rivet and riveted structure
US2333418A (en) * 1942-10-13 1943-11-02 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Dimpling apparatus
US2348875A (en) * 1943-06-11 1944-05-16 Charles L Beard Punch and die
US2356526A (en) * 1939-12-19 1944-08-22 Mayer Friedrich Riveting machine
US2365918A (en) * 1942-09-22 1944-12-26 Douglas Aireraft Company Inc Dimpling tool with interchangeable head
US2418736A (en) * 1943-09-30 1947-04-08 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Dimpling machine

Patent Citations (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US485405A (en) * 1892-11-01 Lathe-dog
GB155204A (en) * 1919-09-12 1922-01-12 Reinhold Bauhof Method of and joint for rivetting power-transmitting steel bands
GB454733A (en) * 1935-06-04 1936-10-07 May Claude Hector Improvements relating to rivetted joints
US2114289A (en) * 1935-11-02 1938-04-19 Nicholas A Draim Low drag, corrosion resisting connection and method of forming same
US2356526A (en) * 1939-12-19 1944-08-22 Mayer Friedrich Riveting machine
US2292446A (en) * 1940-04-01 1942-08-11 Huck Mfg Co Apparatus and method for riveting airplane structures or the like
US2302772A (en) * 1940-08-12 1942-11-24 Huck Mfg Co Rivet and riveted structure
US2288378A (en) * 1941-07-16 1942-06-30 Glenn L Martin Co Dimpling tool
US2365918A (en) * 1942-09-22 1944-12-26 Douglas Aireraft Company Inc Dimpling tool with interchangeable head
US2333418A (en) * 1942-10-13 1943-11-02 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Dimpling apparatus
US2348875A (en) * 1943-06-11 1944-05-16 Charles L Beard Punch and die
US2418736A (en) * 1943-09-30 1947-04-08 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Dimpling machine

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2627766A (en) * 1947-07-25 1953-02-10 Engineering & Res Corp Anvil and stripper for punching and riveting machines
US2738575A (en) * 1952-11-10 1956-03-20 Zephyr Mfg Company Apparatus for and method of dimpling work sheets
US2834234A (en) * 1954-05-25 1958-05-13 Chicago Pneumatic Tool Co Coin dimpling apparatus
US2864427A (en) * 1954-06-04 1958-12-16 North American Aviation Inc Dimpling apparatus having a resiliently supported ram
DE2617231A1 (en) * 1975-04-21 1976-11-04 Ferco Int Usine Ferrures METHOD OF MANUFACTURING PLUNGER HOLES
US4481003A (en) * 1980-01-18 1984-11-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Method of producing itegral electrode structure for electron gun
US6351980B1 (en) * 1997-09-16 2002-03-05 Crown Cork & Seal Technologies Corporation Base forming
US20130152656A1 (en) * 2011-12-19 2013-06-20 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Thin plate burring processing method and thin plate female screw-forming method

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US3381515A (en) Cold forming die construction
US3561102A (en) Process of forming a cold driven riveted joint
US2586336A (en) Apparatus for and method of making tubular rivet elements
US2441790A (en) Dimpling apparatus
US2768848A (en) Coupling ball and method of production
US2542023A (en) Method of making nuts
US2451356A (en) Hollow rivet for pressural upsetting, method of upsetting, and resulting joint
US2636253A (en) Means for and method of producing sheet metal lock washers
US2756444A (en) Method of and apparatus for making nut blanks having axially extending skirt portions
US2080850A (en) Manufacture of nuts
US2928451A (en) Self contained perforating and countersinking unit
US1977162A (en) Method of making articles having a polygonal cross section
US2206740A (en) Nut and method of forming same
US1829972A (en) Process of forming cap nuts
US1978372A (en) Hollow set screw and method of and apparatus for making the same
US2074678A (en) Means and method for making nuts
US2062640A (en) Process for forming nuts and the like
US2281699A (en) Clinch nut
USRE23939E (en) Dimpling apparatus
US2013460A (en) Method of making castle nuts
US2385831A (en) Rivet manufacture
US2015596A (en) Method of making nut blanks
US1874457A (en) Method of making knitting machine latch needles
US1402919A (en) Upsetting tool
US2238960A (en) Method of producing socketed articles