US3108361A - Fabrication of hollow articles - Google Patents

Fabrication of hollow articles Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US3108361A
US3108361A US572648A US57264856A US3108361A US 3108361 A US3108361 A US 3108361A US 572648 A US572648 A US 572648A US 57264856 A US57264856 A US 57264856A US 3108361 A US3108361 A US 3108361A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
sheet
elastic limit
sheets
panel
blank
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
US572648A
Inventor
Neel Robert Milton
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.)
Olin Corp
Original Assignee
Olin Corp
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 Olin Corp filed Critical Olin Corp
Priority to US572648A priority Critical patent/US3108361A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US3108361A publication Critical patent/US3108361A/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
    • B21D53/00Making other particular articles
    • B21D53/02Making other particular articles heat exchangers or parts thereof, e.g. radiators, condensers fins, headers
    • B21D53/04Making other particular articles heat exchangers or parts thereof, e.g. radiators, condensers fins, headers of sheet metal
    • B21D53/045Making other particular articles heat exchangers or parts thereof, e.g. radiators, condensers fins, headers of sheet metal by inflating partially united plates
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10TTECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER US CLASSIFICATION
    • Y10T29/00Metal working
    • Y10T29/49Method of mechanical manufacture
    • Y10T29/4935Heat exchanger or boiler making
    • Y10T29/49366Sheet joined to sheet
    • Y10T29/49369Utilizing bond inhibiting material
    • Y10T29/49371Utilizing bond inhibiting material with subsequent fluid expansion

Definitions

  • FIGJ. 1 A first figure.
  • This invention relates to the fabrication of hollow articles and more specifically to the fabrication of hollow articles which are smooth on one side.
  • the weld-inhibiting design may assume any desired configuration, for example, a design which will define, after expansion of the panel, a fluid conveying circuit of the type required in refrigerator heat exchanger panels.
  • This invention comprehends fabricating a laminated sheet metal panel from sheets having differentiable elastic properties and, if necessary, adequately differentiating the elastic properties and expanding the panel at a pressure between the elastic limit and ultimate rupture strength of one of the sheets, and below the elastic limit of the other sheet.
  • smooth means a surface devoid of depressions or protrusions in the overall general configuration of the surface.
  • elastic limit refers to the maximum stress that a material will with stand without permanent deformation.
  • Another object of this invention is to fabricate a panel having formed therein a hollow portion, such as fluid carrying conduits defined by a smooth surface and an opposite surface having protrusions conforming to the distentions of the hollow portion.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide a method of fabricating panels of the general type disclosed in the aforementioned patent to Grenell, US. 2,690,002 in which one of the outer surfaces has a high degree of smoothness.
  • This invention is directed primarily to the fabrication of metal panels, but in part it is equally applicable to panels fabricated from materials other than metal, such as various plastics, and to panels fabricated from dissimilar materials such as a metal and a plastic joined together with an unjoined portion between the sheets.
  • FIGURES 1-3 indicate schematically a process for fabricating a blank from which a hollow smooth sided panel is formed, and more specifically:
  • FIGURE 1 is a perspective view of a sheet of metal hldhfifil Patented Get. 29, I963
  • FIGURE 2 is a perspective view of the sheet shown in v FIGURE 1 with a second metal sheet superimposed thereon in laminar fashion and tacked thereto as by spotwelding, with the pattern of weld-inhibiting material sandwiched between the sheets;
  • FIGURE 3 is a perspective view of the sheets of FIG- URE 2 being welded together in a rolling mill to form a blank;
  • FIGURE 4 is a perspective view of one side of the finished panel subsequent to distension of the blank by a fluid pressure injected into the unjoined portion thereof through an injection nozzle, the broken lines indicating areas to be trimmed from the ends of the panel;
  • FIGURE 5 is a perspective view of the reverse side of the pane-l shown in FIGURE 4 with the areas to be trimmed from the ends of the panel again indicated by broken lines;
  • FIGURE 6 is a sectional View of the panel taken on the line 6-6 in FIGURE 4;
  • FIGURE 7 is a perspective view of the finished arched panel with the ends cut oil.
  • the fabrication of a fiat sided hollow article by the subject method requires that two sheets of material having differentiable elastic limits be arranged in stack-like fas ion and welded together with an unjoined portion therebetween, and then adequately differentiating the elastic limits and injecting into the unjoined portion a fluid pressure of sufiicient magnitude to permanently distend the sheet having the lower elastic limit but of insufficient magnitude to permanently distend the sheet having the higher elastic limit.
  • Such a blank is fabricated by welding together two sheets having different inherent elastic limits.
  • Two sheets of material may be selected which possess the required difference in strength characteristics and which require the same effective treatment for each of the joined sheets to adequately differentiate these characteristics, or the joined materials may each require a particular diffen entiating treatment, such as special annealing or heat treating to sufficiently differentiate the inherent strength characteristics of the materials.
  • FIGURE 1 shows a sheet of metal 1 with a design of weld-inhibiting material 2 applied to a clean surface 3 thereof.
  • the design is foreshortened in the intended direction of subsequent rolling.
  • the surface of the sheet is cleaned in any conventional manner as by brush-scrubbing.
  • FIGURE 2 shows a second metal sheet 4 superimposed on the surface 3 of the first sheet to which the weld inhibiting material 2 has been applied.
  • the surface of the second sheet 4 adjacent the first sheet I has been previously cleaned in a manner similar to the cleaning of the first sheet.
  • the two sheets are lightly secured together as by spot welding 5 to prevent relative slippage between the sheets as they are welded together in their adjacent areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material. After being tacked together the sheets l and 4- are usually heated to assure welding together of the sheets as they pass through the mill rolls 6.
  • FIGURE 3 shows the two sheets I and 4 passing between a pair of mill rolls 6 and being welded together to form a blank '7 having an vunjoined area defined by the weld-inhibiting material 2.
  • the sheets are elongated in the direction of rolling and reduced in cross-sectional thickness.
  • the initial width of the sheets remains substantially unchanged.
  • the degree of heating, if any, and the reduction in thickness of the sheets depends on the inherent characteristics of the metals being welded together and such practice is well known in the rolling art.
  • a controlled annealing process may be required in which one of the sheets is fully annealed whereas the other sheet is substantially unaffected.
  • an annealing to soften one of the sheets may be required along with a heat treatment to harden the other sheet.
  • Such methods of sheet differentiating treatments will be more fully discussed hereafter.
  • the necessary sheet differentiating treatment may be determined from an appropriate handbook such as, Metals Handbook, 1948 edition, published by The American Society For Metals, Cleveland, Ohio.
  • Metals Handbook 1948 edition, published by The American Society For Metals, Cleveland, Ohio.
  • steel and stainless steel of the same or different characteristics are particularly suitable for the fabrication of smooth sided hollow metal panels.
  • the resultant blanks have one weak side which may be permanently distended at a pressure too low to permanently distend the other stronger side.
  • the blank 7 is then expanded by injecting into the unjoined portion thereof a fluid pressure.
  • a strip of weld-inhibiting material 8 is applied to the surface 3 of the sheet 1 from the design'Z to an edge 9 of the sheet.
  • an unjoined inlet 11 connects the unjoined design with an edge 12 of the finished blank 7.
  • the inlet 11 is forced open and a hollow injection nozzle 13 is inserted therein and is firmly held in place in various manners, for example, as taught in the copending U.S. patent application of Adams, Serial Number 445,108 filed July 22, 1954.
  • FIGURE 4 the unjoined portion of the blank 7 has been expanded to define conduits 14 and form a hollow panel 15.
  • the nozzle 13 is still in the inlet 11.
  • the dashed lines 16 on the right and left ends of the panel 13 indicate the portions of the panel which are to be trimmed off.
  • Conduits 14- protnude from only one side 17 of the panel 15.
  • FIGURE shows the other side 18 of the hollow panel which is smooth. The distension of the panel on only one side may be clearly seen in FIGURE 6.
  • FIGURE 7 shows an arched panel 20 after it has been expanded to form hollow tube distension 2.1 on one side and a smooth arched surface 22 on the opposite side.
  • the panels may be arched, curved or fiat.
  • An arched or curved panel may be shaped by stamping a blank fabricated in the usual manner in a press in the manner taught in the following patents: U.S. 562,309 granted June 16, 1896 or U.S. 1,267,591 granted May 28, 1918, or in any other appropriate manner.
  • Example 1 A blank is fabricated from two sheets of copper alloy,
  • one of the sheets being an electrolytic tough pitch copper containing: 99.90% minimum copper, 0.05% maximum oxygen, 0.003% maximum phosphorus, 0.03% total or 0.01% each of other impurities
  • the other sheet being a high conductivity bronze containing: 94-96% copper, 0.75-1.25 tin, maximum phosphorus, 0.05% maximum lead, 0.01% maximum impurities and the balance zinc.
  • a inch .wide stnip of weld-inhibiting material is applied to a surface of one of the sheets and this surface is then welded to a surface of the other sheet in the areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material by hot rolling at a temperature of 1700" F., and a reduction of 60% in a single pass through a rolling mill.
  • the welded blank may be f-ully annealed and then cold rolled to an additional reduction of after which it is in the work hardened state having a hardness of 69 Rockwell B and a yield strength of 55,000 p.s.i. for the high conductivity alloy and a hardness of 87 Rockwell B and a yield strength of 67,000 p.s.i.
  • the blank is then heated at a temperature of 300 C. for minutes fully annealing the electrolytic tough pitch alloy. This temperature is below the annealing temperature of 650 C. for the high conductivity alloy.
  • the electrolytic tough pitch alloy has then been annealed to a yield strength of about 7,000 p.s.i.
  • the high conductivity alloy retains a yield strength of about 56,000 p.s.i.
  • a finished blank .045 inch thick in which the sheets had the same initial thickness so that the wall thickness on both sides of the unjoined inner portion of the blank is substantially the same is then expanded by a pressure of about 1,200 p.s.i. injected into the unjoined portion. The optimum expansion pressure is dependent on the pattern design involved.
  • This pressure is suflicient to distend the electrolytic tough pitch alloy beyond its elastic limit but is below its rupture strength, thus permanently distending this wall of the unjoined portion of the blank.
  • the pressure is below that which would permanently distend the unjoined high conductivity alloy wall of the blank.
  • the resultant internal tube height is about .045 inch.
  • Example 2 In a blank fabricated from two sheets of aluminum alloy, the first commercially pure aluminum (1100 alloy), and the second 6061 aluminum alloy, a 7 inch wide strip of weld-inhibiting material is applied to the clean face of one of the sheets and this face is welded to a clean face of the other sheet in the areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material by hot rolling at a temperature of 950 F., and a reduction of in a single pass through a rolling mill. Subsequently, the welded blank is fully annealed and cold rolled at a reduction of 27%. Except for obtaining a weld and a blank of even thickness, the previous annealing step has no effect on the mechanical properties of either side of the blank after the following heat treatments.
  • the blank is solution heat treated by holding the entire mass of the blank at a temperature of 970 F. for 10 minutes, followed by an immediate quenching, within five seconds of being removed from the furnace, in water at a temperature of about 50 F.
  • the 1100 alloy is now fully annealed to a 0 temper and the 6061 alloy has now been solution heat treated to the T-4 temper.
  • the blank is next precipitation heat treated at either a temperature of 320 F. for 16-20 hours, or a temperature of 350 F. for 6-10 hours which yields the same results.
  • the 1100 alloy now has a yield strength of 5,000 p.s.i. and the 6061 alloy now has a yield strength of 40,000 p.s.i. both at an off set of 0.2%.
  • a finished blank .060 inch thick in which the sheets had the same initial thickness prior to rolling so that the wall thickness on both sides of the unjoined inner portion of the blank is substantially the same is then expanded by injecting into the unjoined portion of the blank a pressure of about 1,200 p.s.i. depending on the pattern design.
  • This pressure is sufiicient to distend the 1100 aluminum :3 alloy beyond its elastic limit but below its rupture strength, thus permanently distending this wall of the unjoined portion of the blank.
  • the pressure is below that which will permanently distend the unjoined 6061 aluminum alloy wall of the blank thus leaving this side smooth.
  • the internal tube height of the panel is about .070 inch.
  • a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit difierentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure of suflicient magnitude to distend one of said sheets having the lower elastic limit but of insufiicient magnitude to distend the other of said sheets having the higher elastic limit, said one sheet with said lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet having thehigher elastic limit such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit whereby said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side.
  • a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side an an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel comprising providing a plurality of sheets having diflerent-iable elastic limits forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that the said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will dis-tend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoi-ned area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to increase the diflerence in the elastic limits of said sheets for purposes of subsequentrdistention, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid
  • a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, me-tallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure of sufficient magnitude to permanently distend said one of said shee
  • a process for fabricating a hollow sheet metal panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having distentions formed by the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of a surface of a first sheet a design of weldinhibiting material, positioning adjacent said surface a surface of a second sheet having an elastic limit diflerent than said first sheet, welding said sheets together in the areas of said adjacent surfaces not separated by said weldinhibiting material, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting between said sheets in the area separated by said weld-inhibiting material a fluid pressure of suflicient magnitude to distend one of said sheets having the lower elastic limit but of insuflicient magnitude to distend said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, whereby upon release of said pressure said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side, said one of said sheets with the lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet having the higher elastic limit such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will dis
  • a process for fabricating a hollow sheet metal panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having distentions formed by the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of a surface of a first sheet a design of weldinhibiting material, positioning adjacent said surface a surface of a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from said first sheet, welding said sheets together in the areas of said adjacent surfaces not separated by said weld-inhibiting material of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to increase the difference in the elastic limits of said sheets for purposes of subsequent distention, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting between said sheets in the area separated by said weld-inhibiting material a fluid pressure of
  • a process for fabricating a hollow sheet metal panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having distentions 'formed by the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of a surface of a first sheet a design of weldinhibiting material, positioning adjacent said surface a surface of a second sheet having an elastic limit different than said first sheet, welding said sheets together in the areas of said adjacent surfaces not separated by said weld-inhibiting material, metailurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fiuid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting between said sheets in the area separated
  • a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of the surface of a first sheet a design of weld-inhibiting material, said Weld-inhibiting material being capable of releasing a gas at high pressure when heated to an elevated temperature, superimposing a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from said first sheet on said first sheet, joining said sheets together in the areas of their adjacent surfaces not separated by said weld-inhibiting material of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to increase the difference in elastic limits of said sheets for purposes of subsequent distention, and heating said joined sheets
  • the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit difierentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, and metallurgically treating said unjoined sheets to increase the difference in the elastic limit of said sheets with one of said sheets with the induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure isjected into said unjoined portion than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit.
  • a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a. second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit an amount different from the amount of said reduction in elastic limit of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure to permanently dis
  • the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on a. second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define said unjoined interior portion between adjacent surraces of said sheets, fully annealing said joined sheets, and metallurgically treating said joined sheets to differentiate the elastic limits of said sheets with one of said sheets with the induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one s icet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined portion than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit.
  • the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on :a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define said unjoined interior portion between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgicaily treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet having the higher elastic limit below the value of the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit while substantially holding constant the initial value of the elastic limit of the sheet having the lower elastic limit with one of said sheets with the induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one sheet having the said induced lower elastic limit will clistend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined portion than said other of said sheets.
  • a rocess for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit ditiercntiablc from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit below the value of elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit while substantially holding constant the initial value of the elastic limit of the sheet having a lower elastic limit with one of said sheets with the induced flower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one sheet having the said induced lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoine d areas
  • the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit diiferentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define said unj-oined interior portion between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic lirnit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet having the lower elastic limit to values wherein the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit has an induced elastic limit greater than the induced elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit, with one of said sheets with the said induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets with said induced higher elastic limit such that said one sheet having said induced lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined portion than said
  • a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit difierentiiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unj-oined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having a higher elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having a lower limit to values wherein the sheet initially having a lower limit has an elastic limit greater than the induced value of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit, with one of said sheets with the said induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets with the said induced higher elastic limit such that said one sheet having the said induced lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than saidother sheet having the said induced

Description

Oct. 29, 1963 R. M. NEEL FABRICATION OF HOLLOW ARTICLES Filed March 20, 1956 FIGZ,
FIGJ.
11/75/772? fazzer M A254 United States Patent mas er FAliRlfiATltlN 0F HOLLQW ARTBCLES Robert Milton Neel, New Douglas, lib, assig nor to Gian Mathieson Chemical tlorporation, East Alton, Ill., a
corporation of Virginia Filed Mar. 26, 1956, Ser. No. 572,648 14 Claims. (Cl. 229-1573) This invention relates to the fabrication of hollow articles and more specifically to the fabrication of hollow articles which are smooth on one side.
In the fabrication of hollow sheet metal panels by a well known process two sheets of metal are arranged in stack-like fashion with a design of weld-inhibiting material applied to a portion of one of the adjacent faces of the sheets. The sheets are then welded together in their adjacent areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material by any suitable manner such as hot rolling. As the sheets are being welded together by hot rolling they are elongated in the direction of rolling and therefore the design of weld-inhibiting material must be foreshortened in the intended direction of rolling when it is applied to the sheet. After the sheets are welded together they are usually softened as by annealing and the unjoined portion to which the weld-inhibiting material has been applied is outwardly expanded as by injecting therein a fluid pressure of suflicient magnitude to permanently distend the sheets in the area adjacent to the weld-inhibiting design. The weld-inhibiting design may assume any desired configuration, for example, a design which will define, after expansion of the panel, a fluid conveying circuit of the type required in refrigerator heat exchanger panels. The aforementioned process is fully described in the patent to Grenell, U.S. 2,690,002 issued September 28, 1954. The teaching of this patent requires the use of dies in fabricating fiat sided panels.
This invention comprehends fabricating a laminated sheet metal panel from sheets having differentiable elastic properties and, if necessary, adequately differentiating the elastic properties and expanding the panel at a pressure between the elastic limit and ultimate rupture strength of one of the sheets, and below the elastic limit of the other sheet.
As used herein the term smooth means a surface devoid of depressions or protrusions in the overall general configuration of the surface. The term elastic limit refers to the maximum stress that a material will with stand without permanent deformation.
It is, therefore, an object of this invention to fabricate a hollow panel in which one side is smooth and the other side is distended.
Another object of this invention is to fabricate a panel having formed therein a hollow portion, such as fluid carrying conduits defined by a smooth surface and an opposite surface having protrusions conforming to the distentions of the hollow portion.
Another object of this invention is to provide a method of fabricating panels of the general type disclosed in the aforementioned patent to Grenell, US. 2,690,002 in which one of the outer surfaces has a high degree of smoothness.
This invention is directed primarily to the fabrication of metal panels, but in part it is equally applicable to panels fabricated from materials other than metal, such as various plastics, and to panels fabricated from dissimilar materials such as a metal and a plastic joined together with an unjoined portion between the sheets.
Additional objects and advantages will be apparent from the following description and drawings in which:
FIGURES 1-3 indicate schematically a process for fabricating a blank from which a hollow smooth sided panel is formed, and more specifically:
FIGURE 1 is a perspective view of a sheet of metal hldhfifil Patented Get. 29, I963 FIGURE 2 is a perspective view of the sheet shown in v FIGURE 1 with a second metal sheet superimposed thereon in laminar fashion and tacked thereto as by spotwelding, with the pattern of weld-inhibiting material sandwiched between the sheets;
FIGURE 3 is a perspective view of the sheets of FIG- URE 2 being welded together in a rolling mill to form a blank;
FIGURE 4 is a perspective view of one side of the finished panel subsequent to distension of the blank by a fluid pressure injected into the unjoined portion thereof through an injection nozzle, the broken lines indicating areas to be trimmed from the ends of the panel;
FIGURE 5 is a perspective view of the reverse side of the pane-l shown in FIGURE 4 with the areas to be trimmed from the ends of the panel again indicated by broken lines;
FIGURE 6 is a sectional View of the panel taken on the line 6-6 in FIGURE 4; and
FIGURE 7 is a perspective view of the finished arched panel with the ends cut oil.
The fabrication of a fiat sided hollow article by the subject method requires that two sheets of material having differentiable elastic limits be arranged in stack-like fas ion and welded together with an unjoined portion therebetween, and then adequately differentiating the elastic limits and injecting into the unjoined portion a fluid pressure of sufiicient magnitude to permanently distend the sheet having the lower elastic limit but of insufficient magnitude to permanently distend the sheet having the higher elastic limit.
Such a blank is fabricated by welding together two sheets having different inherent elastic limits. Two sheets of material may be selected which possess the required difference in strength characteristics and which require the same effective treatment for each of the joined sheets to adequately differentiate these characteristics, or the joined materials may each require a particular diffen entiating treatment, such as special annealing or heat treating to sufficiently differentiate the inherent strength characteristics of the materials.
Referring to the drawings, FIGURE 1 shows a sheet of metal 1 with a design of weld-inhibiting material 2 applied to a clean surface 3 thereof. The design is foreshortened in the intended direction of subsequent rolling. The surface of the sheet is cleaned in any conventional manner as by brush-scrubbing.
FIGURE 2 shows a second metal sheet 4 superimposed on the surface 3 of the first sheet to which the weld inhibiting material 2 has been applied. The surface of the second sheet 4 adjacent the first sheet I has been previously cleaned in a manner similar to the cleaning of the first sheet. The two sheets are lightly secured together as by spot welding 5 to prevent relative slippage between the sheets as they are welded together in their adjacent areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material. After being tacked together the sheets l and 4- are usually heated to assure welding together of the sheets as they pass through the mill rolls 6.
FIGURE 3 shows the two sheets I and 4 passing between a pair of mill rolls 6 and being welded together to form a blank '7 having an vunjoined area defined by the weld-inhibiting material 2. During the rolling operation the sheets are elongated in the direction of rolling and reduced in cross-sectional thickness. The initial width of the sheets remains substantially unchanged. The degree of heating, if any, and the reduction in thickness of the sheets depends on the inherent characteristics of the metals being welded together and such practice is well known in the rolling art. Following the initial has been fabricated of materials having different inherent strength characteristics, a controlled annealing process may be required in which one of the sheets is fully annealed whereas the other sheet is substantially unaffected. With certain composite copper or aluminum blanks an annealing to soften one of the sheets may be required along with a heat treatment to harden the other sheet. Such methods of sheet differentiating treatments will be more fully discussed hereafter.
\For any given pair of sheets the necessary sheet differentiating treatment may be determined from an appropriate handbook such as, Metals Handbook, 1948 edition, published by The American Society For Metals, Cleveland, Ohio. In addition to copper and aluminum, steel and stainless steel of the same or different characteristics are particularly suitable for the fabrication of smooth sided hollow metal panels. In any event, the resultant blanks have one weak side which may be permanently distended at a pressure too low to permanently distend the other stronger side.
The blank 7 is then expanded by injecting into the unjoined portion thereof a fluid pressure. Referring to FIGURE 1, a strip of weld-inhibiting material 8 is applied to the surface 3 of the sheet 1 from the design'Z to an edge 9 of the sheet. Thus an unjoined inlet 11 connects the unjoined design with an edge 12 of the finished blank 7. The inlet 11 is forced open and a hollow injection nozzle 13 is inserted therein and is firmly held in place in various manners, for example, as taught in the copending U.S. patent application of Adams, Serial Number 445,108 filed July 22, 1954. Other methods of expanding the blank are known, such as applying a weldinhibiting matenial which releases a gas at a certain temperature with the resultant gas pressure distending the blank, or by drilling through a face of the blank directly into the unjoined portion and injecting the expansion fluid into the unjoined portion through the resultant aperture.
In FIGURE 4 the unjoined portion of the blank 7 has been expanded to define conduits 14 and form a hollow panel 15. The nozzle 13 is still in the inlet 11. The dashed lines 16 on the right and left ends of the panel 13 indicate the portions of the panel which are to be trimmed off. Conduits 14- protnude from only one side 17 of the panel 15. FIGURE shows the other side 18 of the hollow panel which is smooth. The distension of the panel on only one side may be clearly seen in FIGURE 6.
FIGURE 7 shows an arched panel 20 after it has been expanded to form hollow tube distension 2.1 on one side and a smooth arched surface 22 on the opposite side. The panels may be arched, curved or fiat. An arched or curved panel may be shaped by stamping a blank fabricated in the usual manner in a press in the manner taught in the following patents: U.S. 562,309 granted June 16, 1896 or U.S. 1,267,591 granted May 28, 1918, or in any other appropriate manner.
Many combinations of sheets may be joined to form a blank having an unjoined internal portion so that one side will remain smooth when a pressure of sufficient magnitude to permanently distend the other side of the blank is injected into the unjoined portion. The following examples set forth the treatment of but a few of the many possible combinations. The following examples refer to yield strength rather than elastic limit, however, the clastic limit, which is slightly less than the yield strength, may be determined on the basis of the yield strength for any given metal, by methods well understood in the art.
Example 1 A blank is fabricated from two sheets of copper alloy,
one of the sheets being an electrolytic tough pitch copper containing: 99.90% minimum copper, 0.05% maximum oxygen, 0.003% maximum phosphorus, 0.03% total or 0.01% each of other impurities, and the other sheet being a high conductivity bronze containing: 94-96% copper, 0.75-1.25 tin, maximum phosphorus, 0.05% maximum lead, 0.01% maximum impurities and the balance zinc. A inch .wide stnip of weld-inhibiting material is applied to a surface of one of the sheets and this surface is then welded to a surface of the other sheet in the areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material by hot rolling at a temperature of 1700" F., and a reduction of 60% in a single pass through a rolling mill. Subsequently, the welded blank may be f-ully annealed and then cold rolled to an additional reduction of after which it is in the work hardened state having a hardness of 69 Rockwell B and a yield strength of 55,000 p.s.i. for the high conductivity alloy and a hardness of 87 Rockwell B and a yield strength of 67,000 p.s.i. for the electrolytic tough pitch alloy. The blank is then heated at a temperature of 300 C. for minutes fully annealing the electrolytic tough pitch alloy. This temperature is below the annealing temperature of 650 C. for the high conductivity alloy. :The electrolytic tough pitch alloy has then been annealed to a yield strength of about 7,000 p.s.i. The high conductivity alloy retains a yield strength of about 56,000 p.s.i. A finished blank .045 inch thick in which the sheets had the same initial thickness so that the wall thickness on both sides of the unjoined inner portion of the blank is substantially the same is then expanded by a pressure of about 1,200 p.s.i. injected into the unjoined portion. The optimum expansion pressure is dependent on the pattern design involved. This pressure is suflicient to distend the electrolytic tough pitch alloy beyond its elastic limit but is below its rupture strength, thus permanently distending this wall of the unjoined portion of the blank. The pressure is below that which would permanently distend the unjoined high conductivity alloy wall of the blank. The resultant internal tube height is about .045 inch.
Example 2 In a blank fabricated from two sheets of aluminum alloy, the first commercially pure aluminum (1100 alloy), and the second 6061 aluminum alloy, a 7 inch wide strip of weld-inhibiting material is applied to the clean face of one of the sheets and this face is welded to a clean face of the other sheet in the areas not separated by the weld-inhibiting material by hot rolling at a temperature of 950 F., and a reduction of in a single pass through a rolling mill. Subsequently, the welded blank is fully annealed and cold rolled at a reduction of 27%. Except for obtaining a weld and a blank of even thickness, the previous annealing step has no effect on the mechanical properties of either side of the blank after the following heat treatments. The blank is solution heat treated by holding the entire mass of the blank at a temperature of 970 F. for 10 minutes, followed by an immediate quenching, within five seconds of being removed from the furnace, in water at a temperature of about 50 F. The 1100 alloy is now fully annealed to a 0 temper and the 6061 alloy has now been solution heat treated to the T-4 temper. The blank is next precipitation heat treated at either a temperature of 320 F. for 16-20 hours, or a temperature of 350 F. for 6-10 hours which yields the same results. The 1100 alloy now has a yield strength of 5,000 p.s.i. and the 6061 alloy now has a yield strength of 40,000 p.s.i. both at an off set of 0.2%. A finished blank .060 inch thick in which the sheets had the same initial thickness prior to rolling so that the wall thickness on both sides of the unjoined inner portion of the blank is substantially the same is then expanded by injecting into the unjoined portion of the blank a pressure of about 1,200 p.s.i. depending on the pattern design. This pressure is sufiicient to distend the 1100 aluminum :3 alloy beyond its elastic limit but below its rupture strength, thus permanently distending this wall of the unjoined portion of the blank. The pressure is below that which will permanently distend the unjoined 6061 aluminum alloy wall of the blank thus leaving this side smooth. The internal tube height of the panel is about .070 inch.
In expanding smooth sided panels by the aforementioned process and excessive distention of the weaker side of the panel may cause the stronger side to be pulled in slightly in the area at which the two walls of the hollow portion of the panel unite. Should this occur, the effect can be eliminated by expanding the weaker side to a lesser degree. In any event, the stronger side of the panel will not have a permanent outward distention if the force exerted within the unjoined portion of the panel is not of sufficient magnitude to distend the stronger side past its elastic limit. Although in the technical sense some materials will receive a permanent set even when they are stressed within their elastic limit such a permanent set is very minute and of no practical importance and thi invention is intended to include application of the process to such materials.
The same type of procedures may be followed in inflating blanks fabricated of other diflerent metals and of metal and plastic adhesively joined together.
Although the invention has been described with particular reference to certain specific embodiments, materials, techniques and details, various changes and modifications will be apparent to one skilled in the art and the invention is therefore not to be limited to such embodiments, materials, techniques or details except as set forth in the appended claims.
I claim:
1. In a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit difierentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure of suflicient magnitude to distend one of said sheets having the lower elastic limit but of insufiicient magnitude to distend the other of said sheets having the higher elastic limit, said one sheet with said lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet having thehigher elastic limit such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit whereby said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side.
2. In a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side an an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising providing a plurality of sheets having diflerent-iable elastic limits forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that the said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will dis-tend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoi-ned area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to increase the diflerence in the elastic limits of said sheets for purposes of subsequentrdistention, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure of sufiicient magnitude to permanently distend one of said sheets having the induced lower elastic limit but of insuflicient magnitude to permanently distend the other of said sheets having the induced higher elastic limit, whereby said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side.
3. In a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, me-tallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure of sufficient magnitude to permanently distend said one of said sheeets beyond its said lowered elastic limit but less than that required to permanently distend the other of said sheets beyond its raised elastic limit whereby said panel is permanently distended on one side and substantially smooth on the other side.
4. In a process for fabricating a hollow sheet metal panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having distentions formed by the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of a surface of a first sheet a design of weldinhibiting material, positioning adjacent said surface a surface of a second sheet having an elastic limit diflerent than said first sheet, welding said sheets together in the areas of said adjacent surfaces not separated by said weldinhibiting material, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting between said sheets in the area separated by said weld-inhibiting material a fluid pressure of suflicient magnitude to distend one of said sheets having the lower elastic limit but of insuflicient magnitude to distend said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, whereby upon release of said pressure said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side, said one of said sheets with the lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet having the higher elastic limit such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected in said area separated by said weld-inhibiting material than said other sheet with the higher elastic limit.
5. In a process for fabricating a hollow sheet metal panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having distentions formed by the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of a surface of a first sheet a design of weldinhibiting material, positioning adjacent said surface a surface of a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from said first sheet, welding said sheets together in the areas of said adjacent surfaces not separated by said weld-inhibiting material of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to increase the difference in the elastic limits of said sheets for purposes of subsequent distention, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting between said sheets in the area separated by said weld-inhibiting material a fluid pressure of sufficient magnitude to distend said one of said sheets beyond its induced lower elastic limit but of insufficient magnitude to distend said other sheet beyond its induced higher elastic limit whereby upon release of said pressure said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side.
6. In a process for fabricating a hollow sheet metal panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having distentions 'formed by the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of a surface of a first sheet a design of weldinhibiting material, positioning adjacent said surface a surface of a second sheet having an elastic limit different than said first sheet, welding said sheets together in the areas of said adjacent surfaces not separated by said weld-inhibiting material, metailurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fiuid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting between said sheets in the area separated by said weld-inhibiting material a fluid pressure of sufiicient magnitude to distend said one of said sheets beyond its induced lower elastic limit but of insufiicient magnitude to distend said other sheet beyond its induced higher elastic limit whereby upon release of said pressure said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side.
7. In a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel the steps comprising forming a blank by applying to a portion of the surface of a first sheet a design of weld-inhibiting material, said Weld-inhibiting material being capable of releasing a gas at high pressure when heated to an elevated temperature, superimposing a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from said first sheet on said first sheet, joining said sheets together in the areas of their adjacent surfaces not separated by said weld-inhibiting material of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to increase the difference in elastic limits of said sheets for purposes of subsequent distention, and heating said joined sheets to an elevated temperature whereby said weldinhibiting material generates a gas of sufiicient magnitude to permanently distend one of said sheets having the induced lower elastic limit, but of insuficient magnitude to permanently distend the other or" said sheets having the higher elastic limit.
8. In the fabrication of a hollow panel from a blank having an unjoined interior portion adapted to contain a fiuid under pressure for expansion of said blank, the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit difierentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, and metallurgically treating said unjoined sheets to increase the difference in the elastic limit of said sheets with one of said sheets with the induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure isjected into said unjoined portion than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit.
9. In a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a. second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit an amount different from the amount of said reduction in elastic limit of which one of said sheets has an elastic limit lower than the elastic limit of the other of said sheets with said one sheet having a thickness relative to the thickness of said other sheet such that said one sheet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure to permanently distend said one of said sheets beyond its induced lower elastic limit but less than that required to permanently distend the said other of said sheets beyond its induced higher elastic limit, whereby said panel is permanently distended on one side and smooth on the other side.
10. In the fabrication of a hollow panel from a blank having an unjoined interior portion adapted to contain a fluid under pressure for expansion of said blank, the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on a. second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define said unjoined interior portion between adjacent surraces of said sheets, fully annealing said joined sheets, and metallurgically treating said joined sheets to differentiate the elastic limits of said sheets with one of said sheets with the induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one s icet having the lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined portion than said other sheet having the higher elastic limit.
11. In the fabrication of a hollow panel from a blank having an unjoined interior portion adapted to contain a fluid under pressure for expansion of said blank, the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on :a second sheet having an elastic limit differentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define said unjoined interior portion between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgicaily treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet having the higher elastic limit below the value of the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit while substantially holding constant the initial value of the elastic limit of the sheet having the lower elastic limit with one of said sheets with the induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one sheet having the said induced lower elastic limit will clistend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined portion than said other of said sheets.
'12. in a rocess for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit ditiercntiablc from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unjoined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit below the value of elastic limit of the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit while substantially holding constant the initial value of the elastic limit of the sheet having a lower elastic limit with one of said sheets with the induced flower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets such that said one sheet having the said induced lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than said other sheet, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoine d areas a fluid pressure to permanently distend said one of said sheets beyond its said induced lower elastic limit but less than that required to permanently distend the said other of said sheets beyond its elastic limit.
13. In the fabrication of a holi-ow panel from a blank having an unjoined interior portion adapted to contain a fluid under pressure for expansion of said'blank, the method of forming said blank comprising the steps of superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit diiferentiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define said unj-oined interior portion between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic lirnit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet having the lower elastic limit to values wherein the sheet initially having the lower elastic limit has an induced elastic limit greater than the induced elastic limit of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit, with one of said sheets with the said induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets with said induced higher elastic limit such that said one sheet having said induced lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined portion than said other sheet having the said induced higher elastic limit.
14. In a process for fabricating a hollow panel having a smooth side and an opposite side having protrusions formed by distentions conforming to the hollow portion of said panel, the steps comprising forming a blank by superimposing a first sheet on a second sheet having an elastic limit difierentiiable from the elastic limit of said first sheet, joining a portion of said sheets together to define an enclosed unj-oined area between adjacent surfaces of said sheets, metallurgically treating said joined sheets to reduce the elastic limit of the sheet initially having a higher elastic limit and to raise the elastic limit of the sheet initially having a lower limit to values wherein the sheet initially having a lower limit has an elastic limit greater than the induced value of the sheet initially having the higher elastic limit, with one of said sheets with the said induced lower elastic limit having a thickness relative to the thickness of the other of said sheets with the said induced higher elastic limit such that said one sheet having the said induced lower elastic limit will distend at a lower fluid pressure injected into said unjoined area than saidother sheet having the said induced higher elastic limit, and expanding said blank to form a panel by injecting within said unjoined area a fluid pressure to permanently distend said one of said sheets beyond its said induced lower elastic limit but less than that required to permanently distend the said other of said sheets beyond its said induced higher elastic limit.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 2,2 12,481 Sendzimir Aug. 20, 1940 2,537,746 Davis Jan. 9, 1951 2,582,358 Schoellerman Jan. 15, 1952 2,690,002 Grenell Sept. 24, 1954 2,766,514 Adams Oct. 16, 1956

Claims (1)

1. IN A PROCESS FOR FABRICATING A HOLLOW PANEL HAVING A SMOOTH SIDE AND AN OPPOSITE SIDE HAVING PROTRUSIONS FORMED BY DISTENTIONS CONFORMING TO THE HOLLOW PORTION OF SAID PANEL, THE STEPS COMPRISING FORMING A BLANK BY SUPERIMPOSING A FIRST SHEET ON A SECOND SHEET HAVING AN ELASTIC LIMIT DIFFERENTIABLE FROM THE ELASTIC LIMIT OF SAID FIRST SHEET, JOINING A PORTION OF SAID SHEETS TOGETHER TO DEFINE AN ENCLOSED UNJOINED AREA BETWEEN ADJACENT SURFACES OF SAID SHEETS, EXPANDING SAID BLANK TO FORM A PANEL BY INJECTING WITHIN SAID UNJOINED AREA FLUID PRESSURE OF SUFFICIENT MAGNITUDE TO DISTEND ONE OF SAID SHEETS HAVING THE LOWER ELASTIC LIMIT BUT OF INSUFFICIENT MAGNITUDE TO DISTEND THE OTHER OF SAID SHEETS HAVING THE HIGHER ELASTIC LIMIT, SAID ONE SHEET WITH SAID LOWER ELASTIC LIMIT HAVING A THICKNESS RELATIVE TO THE THICKNESS OF SAID OTHER SHEET HAVING THE HIGHER ELASTIC LIMIT SUCH THAT SAID ONE SHEET HAVING THE LOWER ELASTIC LIMIT WILL DISTEND AT A LOWER FLUID PRESSURE INJECTED INTO SAID UNJOINED AREA THAN SAID OTHER SHEET HAVING THE HIGHER ELASTIC LIMIT WHEREBY SAID PANEL IS PERMANENTLY DISTENDED ON ONE SIDE AND SMOOTH ON THE OTHER SIDE.
US572648A 1956-03-20 1956-03-20 Fabrication of hollow articles Expired - Lifetime US3108361A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US572648A US3108361A (en) 1956-03-20 1956-03-20 Fabrication of hollow articles

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US572648A US3108361A (en) 1956-03-20 1956-03-20 Fabrication of hollow articles

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US3108361A true US3108361A (en) 1963-10-29

Family

ID=24288759

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US572648A Expired - Lifetime US3108361A (en) 1956-03-20 1956-03-20 Fabrication of hollow articles

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US3108361A (en)

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3222763A (en) * 1960-02-26 1965-12-14 Olin Mathieson Method of making a hollow article
US3354531A (en) * 1963-11-13 1967-11-28 Olin Mathieson Process for making hollow articles by differential heat treatment
US3432903A (en) * 1964-12-29 1969-03-18 Ver Deutsche Metallwerke Ag Process of producing sheet metal structures
US3465568A (en) * 1966-02-11 1969-09-09 Svenska Metallverken Ab Method for embossing repeated patterns in strip material,preferably metal strip and means for carrying out the method
US3981753A (en) * 1968-04-30 1976-09-21 Kennecott Copper Corporation Stop-weld composition and the method of using it
US5070607A (en) * 1989-08-25 1991-12-10 Rolls-Royce Plc Heat exchange and methods of manufacture thereof
US5385204A (en) * 1989-08-25 1995-01-31 Rolls-Royce Plc Heat exchanger and methods of manufacture thereof
US5505256A (en) * 1991-02-19 1996-04-09 Rolls-Royce Plc Heat exchangers and methods of manufacture thereof

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2212481A (en) * 1936-12-12 1940-08-20 American Rolling Mill Co Multicellular expanded material and process of manufacturing same
US2537746A (en) * 1946-08-22 1951-01-09 Prosperity Co Inc Method of forming pressing elements for ironing machines
US2582358A (en) * 1948-06-08 1952-01-15 Northrop Aircraft Inc Method of producing stiffened skin panel
US2690002A (en) * 1949-11-18 1954-09-28 Olin Ind Inc Method of making hollow sheet metal fabrications having a plurality of interconnected passageways
US2766514A (en) * 1953-08-24 1956-10-16 Olin Mathieson Process for making hollow metal articles having passageways

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2212481A (en) * 1936-12-12 1940-08-20 American Rolling Mill Co Multicellular expanded material and process of manufacturing same
US2537746A (en) * 1946-08-22 1951-01-09 Prosperity Co Inc Method of forming pressing elements for ironing machines
US2582358A (en) * 1948-06-08 1952-01-15 Northrop Aircraft Inc Method of producing stiffened skin panel
US2690002A (en) * 1949-11-18 1954-09-28 Olin Ind Inc Method of making hollow sheet metal fabrications having a plurality of interconnected passageways
US2766514A (en) * 1953-08-24 1956-10-16 Olin Mathieson Process for making hollow metal articles having passageways

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3222763A (en) * 1960-02-26 1965-12-14 Olin Mathieson Method of making a hollow article
US3354531A (en) * 1963-11-13 1967-11-28 Olin Mathieson Process for making hollow articles by differential heat treatment
US3432903A (en) * 1964-12-29 1969-03-18 Ver Deutsche Metallwerke Ag Process of producing sheet metal structures
US3465568A (en) * 1966-02-11 1969-09-09 Svenska Metallverken Ab Method for embossing repeated patterns in strip material,preferably metal strip and means for carrying out the method
US3981753A (en) * 1968-04-30 1976-09-21 Kennecott Copper Corporation Stop-weld composition and the method of using it
US5070607A (en) * 1989-08-25 1991-12-10 Rolls-Royce Plc Heat exchange and methods of manufacture thereof
US5385204A (en) * 1989-08-25 1995-01-31 Rolls-Royce Plc Heat exchanger and methods of manufacture thereof
US5505256A (en) * 1991-02-19 1996-04-09 Rolls-Royce Plc Heat exchangers and methods of manufacture thereof

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2718690A (en) Method of producing composite metals
US2766514A (en) Process for making hollow metal articles having passageways
US2906006A (en) Method of making a sheet metal article
DE1110119B (en) Method for producing hollow sheet metal bodies
US3108361A (en) Fabrication of hollow articles
US3354531A (en) Process for making hollow articles by differential heat treatment
US3222763A (en) Method of making a hollow article
US2860409A (en) Solid-phase bonding of metals
US3340589A (en) Method of making sheet metal panel
US3297082A (en) Heat exchangers of hollow construction
US3196528A (en) Metal sheet article and process for making
US2754572A (en) Method of making roll welded hollow sheet metal structure
US3465406A (en) Process of forming sheet metal panels
US3377683A (en) Method of making a heat exchanger
US3495657A (en) Finned tube
US3067491A (en) Fabrication of hollow articles
US3110090A (en) Fabrication of hollow articles
US3240269A (en) Composite refrigerator evaporator
US3206839A (en) Fabrication of heat exchangers
US3019513A (en) Method of manufacture
US3408723A (en) Method of expanding multihardness panels
US2095580A (en) Steel strip and its production
US1959925A (en) Method of making bimetallic articles
US3538577A (en) Method for controlling tube height by tensile inflation
US3289281A (en) Manufacture of bonded and inflated sheet laminations