WO1991001466A1 - A high pressure tube assembly and method of manufacture - Google Patents

A high pressure tube assembly and method of manufacture Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1991001466A1
WO1991001466A1 PCT/US1990/002967 US9002967W WO9101466A1 WO 1991001466 A1 WO1991001466 A1 WO 1991001466A1 US 9002967 W US9002967 W US 9002967W WO 9101466 A1 WO9101466 A1 WO 9101466A1
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
tube
extending
sleeve member
flange
tube member
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US1990/002967
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Maurice L. Caudill
Original Assignee
Caterpillar Inc.
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 Caterpillar Inc. filed Critical Caterpillar Inc.
Priority to BR909007528A priority Critical patent/BR9007528A/en
Publication of WO1991001466A1 publication Critical patent/WO1991001466A1/en

Links

Classifications

    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16LPIPES; JOINTS OR FITTINGS FOR PIPES; SUPPORTS FOR PIPES, CABLES OR PROTECTIVE TUBING; MEANS FOR THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16L19/00Joints in which sealing surfaces are pressed together by means of a member, e.g. a swivel nut, screwed on or into one of the joint parts
    • F16L19/02Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member
    • F16L19/025Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member the pipe ends having integral collars or flanges
    • F16L19/028Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member the pipe ends having integral collars or flanges the collars or flanges being obtained by deformation of the pipe wall
    • F16L19/0286Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member the pipe ends having integral collars or flanges the collars or flanges being obtained by deformation of the pipe wall and being formed as a flange
    • 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
    • B21D19/00Flanging or other edge treatment, e.g. of tubes
    • B21D19/16Reverse flanging of tube ends
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16LPIPES; JOINTS OR FITTINGS FOR PIPES; SUPPORTS FOR PIPES, CABLES OR PROTECTIVE TUBING; MEANS FOR THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16L19/00Joints in which sealing surfaces are pressed together by means of a member, e.g. a swivel nut, screwed on or into one of the joint parts
    • F16L19/02Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member
    • F16L19/025Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member the pipe ends having integral collars or flanges
    • F16L19/028Pipe ends provided with collars or flanges, integral with the pipe or not, pressed together by a screwed member the pipe ends having integral collars or flanges the collars or flanges being obtained by deformation of the pipe wall
    • 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
    • Y10T29/49826Assembling or joining
    • Y10T29/49908Joining by deforming
    • Y10T29/49915Overedge assembling of seated part
    • 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
    • Y10T29/49826Assembling or joining
    • Y10T29/49908Joining by deforming
    • Y10T29/49938Radially expanding part in cavity, aperture, or hollow body
    • Y10T29/4994Radially expanding internal tube

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to a tube end assembly and more particularly to such an assembly having a double upset flange integrally formed with a sleeve member.
  • hydraulic pipe or rigid tube .ttings include threads to enable separating individual components for installation and service. Threaded fittings typically form a leak-proof seal by pressing a flared or flanged end of the tubing against a mating surface of another component.
  • a long-necked nut mounts on and aligns with the tubing to bear against the tube flare or flange to draw the tube and mating surface together thus maintaining them in sealing relationship to one another. Friction develops between the nut and the flange during tightening and often produces an undesirable, unequal compressive force distribution on the tube surface.
  • Such tube assemblies commonly fail by the tube wall cracking in the curved fillet which is the transition between the straight and flared or flanged tube portions. Stresses arising from the previously described load conditions concentrate in this fillet.
  • Prior methods for forming the tube flange or flare use a split die to clamp the tube during the tube end forming process. This split die leaves die marks in the fillet area which aggravate the stress state there and cause premature initiation of cracks.
  • Such tube end forming processes actually contribute to premature tube assembly failure.
  • One approach to extending tube assembly life is to braze a preformed fitting onto the tube end to avoid deforming the tube wall. This solution is costly and the brazed assemblies are susceptible to tube wall crack failure near the end of the brazed fitting.
  • Another approach to improving threaded hydraulic tube assembly fatigue life is to reinforce them by inserting a preformed sleeve such as a flange between the nut and preformed tube pressure contact surfaces (i.e., the flair or flange) prior to assembly.
  • This approach also has a number of problems.
  • the conformance of the preformed sleeves to the tubes varies substantially because of size variations normally acceptable in commercially available hydraulic tubing.
  • separately formed sleeves and flanges inherently have incongruous mating surfaces having an absence of substantial conformity between respective abutting surfaces. Outer tube surface gouges may result from installing sleeves which are too tight to easily fit over the tube ends.
  • Tube surface gouges and nonuniform contact between the tube fillet and sleeve act as stress risers where small cracks develop. Normal operating stresses may cause these cracks resulting from a less than ideal match between the tube and sleeve surfaces to eventually propagate through the tube wall thus limiting fitting load capacity and fatigue life.
  • the present invention is directed to overcoming one or more of the problems set forth above. It is desirable to have an economical connector for joining rigid elements of a hydraulic system that has improved fatigue life properties and is less prone to failure.
  • a tube assembly includes a tube having a double upset flange formed on one end with a curved fillet extending between the outer surface of the tube and an outwardly extending surface of the flange.
  • the upset flange portion of the tube is integrally formed with a preformed rigid sleeve member that circumscribes the tube and abuts the outwardly extending surface of the flange.
  • a method for forming a tube assembly having a radially extending flange at an end thereof comprises inserting a preformed rigid sleeve member over an end portion of the tube prior to placing the tube and sleeve member in a die in which portions of the sleeve member become the shaping surface for a portion of the tube. After clamping the tube and prepositioned sleeve member in the die, a movable punch is pressed against the tube end thereby upsetting a portion of the tube end and forming a radially extending flange. The contour of a substantial portion of the flange surface and the surface of the curved fillet are shaped by the preformed sleeve member.
  • a connection member is placed on the tube member prior to forming the upset flange or, alternatively, after forming by installing over an opposite unformed end of the tube member.
  • tube assembly features include a double upset flange integrally formed with the preformed rigid sleeve.
  • the sleeve is disposed in an abutting relationship with a radially outwardly extending portion of the double upset flange.
  • Fig. 1 is an isometric view of a tube assembly embodying the present invention
  • Fig. 2 is a plan view of the tube assembly with portions of the tube assembly shown in section;
  • Fig. 3 is a plan view of a punch and die apparatus suitable for performing the method and with portions of the apparatus and tube assembly broken away to show one forming step;
  • Fig. 4 is a plan view of the tube, with the sleeve member shown in section, after completion of the forming step illustrated in Fig. 3;
  • Fig. 5 is a plan view of a punch and die apparatus with portions of the apparatus and tube assembly broken away to show an intermediate forming step
  • Fig. 6 is a plan view of the tube, with the sleeve member shown in section, after completion of the intermediate forming step illustrated in Fig. 5;
  • Fig. 7 is a plan view of a punch and die apparatus with portions of the apparatus and tube assembly broken away to show a forming step;
  • Fig. 8 is a plan view of the tube, with the sleeve member shown in section, after completion of the forming step illustrated in Fig. 7;
  • Fig. 9 is a longitudinal section of the tube assembly.
  • a tube assembly generally indicated by the reference numeral 10 in Figs. 1 and 2, comprises a rigid preformed sleeve member 12 circumscribing a tube 18 having a double upset flange 16 integrally formed with the sleeve member 12.
  • the tube 18 is constructed of steel.
  • the preformed sleeve 12 is preferably constructed of a steel material having a hardness at least equal to that of the tube material.
  • a compound curved fillet 20 extends from an outer surface 22 of the tube 18 to a radially outwardly extending surface 24 of the double upset flange 16.
  • a connection member 26 having internal threads 28 and a radially inwardly extending shoulder 30, is adapted for threaded engagement with a mating threaded fitting, not shown.
  • the connection member 26 has an internal bore 32 that has a diameter only slightly larger than the outer diameter of the first portion 13 of the rigid sleeve member 12.
  • the connection member 26 is mounted on the tube 18 in circumscribing relationship with respect to the first portion 13 of the rigid sleeve member 12 and the tube 18.
  • connection member 26 When connected to a mating fitting, the shoulder 30 of the connection member 26 is drawn into pressure contact with an inner surface 33 of the radial portion 14 of the sleeve member 12. In the connected or operating position, the connection member 26 advantageously contacts only the sleeve member 12 and does not bear directly against any portion of the tube 18 or the tube double upset flange 16.
  • the rigid sleeve member 12 surrounding the tube member 18 at one end thereof is generally L-shaped in cross section, has a first portion 13 circumscribing said tube member and a radial portion 14 extending outwardly from one end of the first portion 13.
  • the first portion 13 has a cylindrical inner surface 52.
  • the radial portion 14 has an outer surface 35 extending in a plane perpendicular to an axis of symmetry 54 of the tube 18.
  • a compound curved interconnecting surface 56 extends between the first 13 and radial .14 portions of the rigid sleeve member 12. This compound curved interconnecting surface 56 identically conforms to the compound curved fillet 20 which extends from the outer surface 22 of the tube 18 to the radially outwardly extending surface 24 of the double upset flange 16.
  • the present embodiment advantageously employs a double upset flange 16 to apply pressure to an O-ring face seal which lies in an O-ring groove 60 on the surface of a mating part (not shown) .
  • the diameter X into which the inward portion 50 extends must be substantially less than the inner diameter Y of the O-ring groove 60.
  • the inwardly extending diameter X is less than or equal to the inner diameter Z of the tube 18 adjacent the first portion 13 of the rigid sleeve 12 (which is less than the O-ring inner diameter Y) , the O-ring seal functions admirably at high pressure. Care must be taken, however, to insure that the inward portion 50 of the double upset flange 16 does not extend into the tube 18 far enough to adversely affect the flow of fluid through the tube 18.
  • the double upset flange 16 is formed by upsetting an end portion 34 of the tube 18.
  • Upsetting is a forming operation for reshaping metal by plastic flow. Force applied to the end of a blank, contained between a punch and a die, causes metal flow. Upsetting is accomplished by inserting a blank of a preselected length into a stationary die. A punch, moving parallel to the axis of the blank, contacts the end of the blank protruding from the die and compresses the metal. Impressions in the punch or die, or both, determine the upset shape produced.
  • the end portion 34 of the tube 18 is the blank to be upset, and the preformed sleeve member 12 serves as an important element of the forming surface which determines the upset shape.
  • the preformed rigid sleeve member 12 Prior to forming the tube end, the preformed rigid sleeve member 12 is inserted over the end portion 34 of the tube. The rigid sleeve member 12 is then positioned on the tube 18 at a predetermined distance from the tube end. As noted above, the length of tube 18 extending beyond the rigid sleeve member 12 is the portion of the tube 18 that will be subsequently upset and formed into a flange. Hence, it is desirable to accurately position the preformed rigid sleeve member relative to the tube end.
  • the tube 18 with the preformed rigid sleeve 12 positioned thereon is then placed between opposed halves of a split die 36 which is in an open position to receive the tube 18 and rigid sleeve 12.
  • the split die 36 has an internal cavity 38 shaped to receive the tube 18 and preformed rigid sleeve 12 and tightly clamp about both members when the die is closed.
  • the tube 18 and sleeve 12 remain rigidly clamped with respect to the die 36 and to each other during the ensuing tube end forming operation. Any die marks impressed on the clamped workpieces are thus imposed on the sleeve 12 and on the outer surface of the tube 18 at a position spaced from the end portion 34 and the fillet 20.
  • an upper die 40 having a cavity 42 defined therein is closed against the split die.
  • a punch 44 is movably mounted within the upper die 40 in coaxial relationship with the tube 18.
  • a die cavity 46 completely surrounding the end portion 34 of the tube is defined by an outer surface 35 of the radially extending rim portion 14 of the sleeve member 12, the fixed surfaces of the die cavity 42, and by external surfaces of the the movable punch 44.
  • the movable punch 44 is forcibly pressed into the end portion 34 of the tube 18 thereby expanding the tube 18 outwardly against the rigid sleeve member 12, and further expanding the end portion 34 outwardly as shown in Fig. 4.
  • the upper die 40 and punch 44 are withdrawn and replaced by a second upper die 40' and punch 44' arrangement as shown in Fig. 5.
  • the movable punch 44' is inserted into the bore of the tube member 18 and the upper die 40' pressed into contact with the split die 36.
  • the conically shaped surfaces defining the internal cavity 42' fold the anterior portion of the tube end 34 inwardly and partially collapse the end portion 34 thereby forming the intermediate shape shown in Fig. 6.
  • the second upper die 40' and punch 44' are withdrawn after the intermediate forming operation and replaced by a third upper die 40" and punch 44'* as shown in Fig 7.
  • upper die 40" is closed against the split die 36, and the punch 44" pressed into the bore of the tube 18. This action forces surfaces defined on the punch 44" against the partially formed end portion of the tube 18 and, acting in cooperation with the die cavity 42" and the sleeve member 12, forms the end portion of the tube into a double upset flange 16 as shown in Fig. 8.
  • the formed end portion of the tube comprises a flange 16 having a first radially outwardly extending wall portion 48 and a second radially inwardly extending wall portion 50, with the sleeve member 12 disposed in an abutting relationship against the first wall portion 48.
  • the double upset flange arrangement also advantageously provides a smooth surface, without requiring additional machining, on the outer face of the radially inwardly extending wall portion 50. This face surface, when the assembly is connected to a mating fitting, generally bears against an o-ring (not shown) to provide a face type seal between the two members.
  • Another significant benefit of the above described method for forming the flange 16 integrally with the sleeve 12 is that there will be no undesirable die marks imprinted upon the formed tube surfaces. As discussed above, die marks near the fillet 20 of the tube 18 are undesirable. The method discussed herein may form die marks on the outer surface 22 of the tube 18; however, these die marks are not near the tube fillet 20.
  • a tube assembly 10 having a double upset flange 16 integrally formed with a rigid sleeve member 12 as described above, is particularly useful in high pressure and severe vibration applications such as hydraulic systems for heavy construction equipment.
  • integrally formed tube and sleeve arrangement improves fatigue life by as much as 40 percent in comparison with similar tube assemblies in which the flange is not formed in situ against the sleeve. Furthermore, the integrally formed upset tube and sleeve assembly is much more economical to produce than brazed assemblies.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Forging (AREA)
  • Rigid Pipes And Flexible Pipes (AREA)

Abstract

A tube assembly (10) is formed by placing a sleeve member (12) over an end portion (34) of a tube (18) and then placing the tube (18) and sleeve (12) in a die (36). A movable punch (44) is then pressed against a projecting end portion (34) of the tube (18) thereby forming a radially extending double upset flange (16) integrally with the sleeve member (12). The sleeve member (12) has contact surfaces (35, 52) against which a substantial portion of the radially extending double upset flange (16) conforms. A portion of the outer surface (22) of the tube (18), and the entire surface of a compound curved fillet (20) extending from the outer surface (22) of the tube (18) to a radially outwardly extending surface (24) of the flange (16) also conform to the sleeve member.

Description

Description
A High Pressure Tube Assembly and Method of Manufacture
Technical Field
This invention relates generally to a tube end assembly and more particularly to such an assembly having a double upset flange integrally formed with a sleeve member.
Background Art
Mechanical connections between rigid high pressure hydraulic system components typically are prone to failure because of limited fatigue life.
Vibrations from vehicle mechanical systems and dynamic hydraulic system elements routinely subject such mechanical connections to severe cyclic loads. Component misalignment causes a static load while internal fluid pressure fluctuations and thermally induced dimensional changes generate additional dynamic loads which combine to further complicate and increase the severity of the loading. Given these severe loading conditions, maintaining tight, leak-proof connections between vehicle mounted high pressure hydraulic system components is a challenging problem.
Unequal compressive force distribution on the tube surface can acerbate these severe operating loads. Generally, hydraulic pipe or rigid tube .ttings include threads to enable separating individual components for installation and service. Threaded fittings typically form a leak-proof seal by pressing a flared or flanged end of the tubing against a mating surface of another component. A long-necked nut mounts on and aligns with the tubing to bear against the tube flare or flange to draw the tube and mating surface together thus maintaining them in sealing relationship to one another. Friction develops between the nut and the flange during tightening and often produces an undesirable, unequal compressive force distribution on the tube surface. Such tube assemblies commonly fail by the tube wall cracking in the curved fillet which is the transition between the straight and flared or flanged tube portions. Stresses arising from the previously described load conditions concentrate in this fillet. Prior methods for forming the tube flange or flare use a split die to clamp the tube during the tube end forming process. This split die leaves die marks in the fillet area which aggravate the stress state there and cause premature initiation of cracks. Such tube end forming processes actually contribute to premature tube assembly failure. One approach to extending tube assembly life is to braze a preformed fitting onto the tube end to avoid deforming the tube wall. This solution is costly and the brazed assemblies are susceptible to tube wall crack failure near the end of the brazed fitting.
Another approach to improving threaded hydraulic tube assembly fatigue life is to reinforce them by inserting a preformed sleeve such as a flange between the nut and preformed tube pressure contact surfaces (i.e., the flair or flange) prior to assembly. This approach also has a number of problems. The conformance of the preformed sleeves to the tubes varies substantially because of size variations normally acceptable in commercially available hydraulic tubing. In addition, separately formed sleeves and flanges inherently have incongruous mating surfaces having an absence of substantial conformity between respective abutting surfaces. Outer tube surface gouges may result from installing sleeves which are too tight to easily fit over the tube ends. Contact between the sleeve and the tube is nonunifor if the sleeves are oversized or have a surface shape which does not intimately conform to the radius of the curved tube fillet. Tube surface gouges and nonuniform contact between the tube fillet and sleeve act as stress risers where small cracks develop. Normal operating stresses may cause these cracks resulting from a less than ideal match between the tube and sleeve surfaces to eventually propagate through the tube wall thus limiting fitting load capacity and fatigue life.
The present invention is directed to overcoming one or more of the problems set forth above. It is desirable to have an economical connector for joining rigid elements of a hydraulic system that has improved fatigue life properties and is less prone to failure.
Disclosure of the Invention in accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a tube assembly includes a tube having a double upset flange formed on one end with a curved fillet extending between the outer surface of the tube and an outwardly extending surface of the flange. The upset flange portion of the tube is integrally formed with a preformed rigid sleeve member that circumscribes the tube and abuts the outwardly extending surface of the flange. As a result of being formed integrally with the rigid sleeve member, the contour of the curved fillet, a substantial portion of the outwardly extending surface of the flange, and a portion of the outer tube surface identically conform with contacting mating surfaces of the rigid sleeve member. In another aspect of the present invention, a method for forming a tube assembly having a radially extending flange at an end thereof comprises inserting a preformed rigid sleeve member over an end portion of the tube prior to placing the tube and sleeve member in a die in which portions of the sleeve member become the shaping surface for a portion of the tube. After clamping the tube and prepositioned sleeve member in the die, a movable punch is pressed against the tube end thereby upsetting a portion of the tube end and forming a radially extending flange. The contour of a substantial portion of the flange surface and the surface of the curved fillet are shaped by the preformed sleeve member. A connection member is placed on the tube member prior to forming the upset flange or, alternatively, after forming by installing over an opposite unformed end of the tube member.
Other features of the tube assembly include a double upset flange integrally formed with the preformed rigid sleeve. The sleeve is disposed in an abutting relationship with a radially outwardly extending portion of the double upset flange.
Other features of the method for forming the tube assembly include upsetting the end portion of the tube member to form a first radially outwardly extending wall portion and a second radially inwardly extending wall portion. The first wall portion is formed in an abutting relationship with respect to the sleeve member. Brief Description of the Drawings
Fig. 1 is an isometric view of a tube assembly embodying the present invention;
Fig. 2 is a plan view of the tube assembly with portions of the tube assembly shown in section;
Fig. 3 is a plan view of a punch and die apparatus suitable for performing the method and with portions of the apparatus and tube assembly broken away to show one forming step; Fig. 4 is a plan view of the tube, with the sleeve member shown in section, after completion of the forming step illustrated in Fig. 3;
Fig. 5 is a plan view of a punch and die apparatus with portions of the apparatus and tube assembly broken away to show an intermediate forming step;
Fig. 6 is a plan view of the tube, with the sleeve member shown in section, after completion of the intermediate forming step illustrated in Fig. 5; Fig. 7 is a plan view of a punch and die apparatus with portions of the apparatus and tube assembly broken away to show a forming step;
Fig. 8 is a plan view of the tube, with the sleeve member shown in section, after completion of the forming step illustrated in Fig. 7;
Fig. 9 is a longitudinal section of the tube assembly.
Best Mode for Carrying Out the Invention A tube assembly, generally indicated by the reference numeral 10 in Figs. 1 and 2, comprises a rigid preformed sleeve member 12 circumscribing a tube 18 having a double upset flange 16 integrally formed with the sleeve member 12. Typically, the tube 18 is constructed of steel. In the present embodiment, the preformed sleeve 12 is preferably constructed of a steel material having a hardness at least equal to that of the tube material.
A compound curved fillet 20 extends from an outer surface 22 of the tube 18 to a radially outwardly extending surface 24 of the double upset flange 16. A connection member 26 having internal threads 28 and a radially inwardly extending shoulder 30, is adapted for threaded engagement with a mating threaded fitting, not shown. The connection member 26 has an internal bore 32 that has a diameter only slightly larger than the outer diameter of the first portion 13 of the rigid sleeve member 12. The connection member 26 is mounted on the tube 18 in circumscribing relationship with respect to the first portion 13 of the rigid sleeve member 12 and the tube 18. When connected to a mating fitting, the shoulder 30 of the connection member 26 is drawn into pressure contact with an inner surface 33 of the radial portion 14 of the sleeve member 12. In the connected or operating position, the connection member 26 advantageously contacts only the sleeve member 12 and does not bear directly against any portion of the tube 18 or the tube double upset flange 16. As best illustrated by Fig. 9, the rigid sleeve member 12 surrounding the tube member 18 at one end thereof is generally L-shaped in cross section, has a first portion 13 circumscribing said tube member and a radial portion 14 extending outwardly from one end of the first portion 13. The first portion 13 has a cylindrical inner surface 52. The radial portion 14 has an outer surface 35 extending in a plane perpendicular to an axis of symmetry 54 of the tube 18. A compound curved interconnecting surface 56 extends between the first 13 and radial .14 portions of the rigid sleeve member 12. This compound curved interconnecting surface 56 identically conforms to the compound curved fillet 20 which extends from the outer surface 22 of the tube 18 to the radially outwardly extending surface 24 of the double upset flange 16. As Fig. 9 illustrates, the present embodiment advantageously employs a double upset flange 16 to apply pressure to an O-ring face seal which lies in an O-ring groove 60 on the surface of a mating part (not shown) . To insure that the outer surface 62 of the radially inwardly extending portion 50 of the double upset flange 16 remains in sealing relationship with the surface of the mating part, the diameter X into which the inward portion 50 extends must be substantially less than the inner diameter Y of the O-ring groove 60. Experimentation reveals that, as long as the inwardly extending diameter X is less than or equal to the inner diameter Z of the tube 18 adjacent the first portion 13 of the rigid sleeve 12 (which is less than the O-ring inner diameter Y) , the O-ring seal functions admirably at high pressure. Care must be taken, however, to insure that the inward portion 50 of the double upset flange 16 does not extend into the tube 18 far enough to adversely affect the flow of fluid through the tube 18.
In the present embodiment, the double upset flange 16 is formed by upsetting an end portion 34 of the tube 18. Upsetting is a forming operation for reshaping metal by plastic flow. Force applied to the end of a blank, contained between a punch and a die, causes metal flow. Upsetting is accomplished by inserting a blank of a preselected length into a stationary die. A punch, moving parallel to the axis of the blank, contacts the end of the blank protruding from the die and compresses the metal. Impressions in the punch or die, or both, determine the upset shape produced. In the present embodiment, the end portion 34 of the tube 18 is the blank to be upset, and the preformed sleeve member 12 serves as an important element of the forming surface which determines the upset shape.
Prior to forming the tube end, the preformed rigid sleeve member 12 is inserted over the end portion 34 of the tube. The rigid sleeve member 12 is then positioned on the tube 18 at a predetermined distance from the tube end. As noted above, the length of tube 18 extending beyond the rigid sleeve member 12 is the portion of the tube 18 that will be subsequently upset and formed into a flange. Hence, it is desirable to accurately position the preformed rigid sleeve member relative to the tube end.
Referring to Fig. 3, the tube 18 with the preformed rigid sleeve 12 positioned thereon is then placed between opposed halves of a split die 36 which is in an open position to receive the tube 18 and rigid sleeve 12. As shown in Tigs. 3, 5 and 7, the split die 36 has an internal cavity 38 shaped to receive the tube 18 and preformed rigid sleeve 12 and tightly clamp about both members when the die is closed. The tube 18 and sleeve 12 remain rigidly clamped with respect to the die 36 and to each other during the ensuing tube end forming operation. Any die marks impressed on the clamped workpieces are thus imposed on the sleeve 12 and on the outer surface of the tube 18 at a position spaced from the end portion 34 and the fillet 20.
After closing the split die 36 and clamping the tube 18 and sleeve 12 therein, an upper die 40 having a cavity 42 defined therein is closed against the split die. A punch 44, is movably mounted within the upper die 40 in coaxial relationship with the tube 18. After the upper die is closed, a die cavity 46 completely surrounding the end portion 34 of the tube is defined by an outer surface 35 of the radially extending rim portion 14 of the sleeve member 12, the fixed surfaces of the die cavity 42, and by external surfaces of the the movable punch 44.
In the initial forming step of a double upset flange, the movable punch 44 is forcibly pressed into the end portion 34 of the tube 18 thereby expanding the tube 18 outwardly against the rigid sleeve member 12, and further expanding the end portion 34 outwardly as shown in Fig. 4.
After initially expanding the end portion 34, the upper die 40 and punch 44 are withdrawn and replaced by a second upper die 40' and punch 44' arrangement as shown in Fig. 5. In the intermediate forming step following the initial expansion of the tube end portion 34, the movable punch 44' is inserted into the bore of the tube member 18 and the upper die 40' pressed into contact with the split die 36. The conically shaped surfaces defining the internal cavity 42' fold the anterior portion of the tube end 34 inwardly and partially collapse the end portion 34 thereby forming the intermediate shape shown in Fig. 6.
The second upper die 40' and punch 44' are withdrawn after the intermediate forming operation and replaced by a third upper die 40" and punch 44'* as shown in Fig 7. In the final forming operation, upper die 40" is closed against the split die 36, and the punch 44" pressed into the bore of the tube 18. This action forces surfaces defined on the punch 44" against the partially formed end portion of the tube 18 and, acting in cooperation with the die cavity 42" and the sleeve member 12, forms the end portion of the tube into a double upset flange 16 as shown in Fig. 8.
Specifically, the formed end portion of the tube comprises a flange 16 having a first radially outwardly extending wall portion 48 and a second radially inwardly extending wall portion 50, with the sleeve member 12 disposed in an abutting relationship against the first wall portion 48. The double upset flange arrangement also advantageously provides a smooth surface, without requiring additional machining, on the outer face of the radially inwardly extending wall portion 50. This face surface, when the assembly is connected to a mating fitting, generally bears against an o-ring (not shown) to provide a face type seal between the two members.
Most significantly, by the above operation, the shape and contour of a substantial portion of the radially outwardly extending surface 24 of the flange, the outer tube surface 22 adjacent the tube end, and the entire surface of the compound curved fillet 20 is formed directly against the preformed sleeve member 12. Thus, it is assured that in their assembled positions, these tube and flange surfaces will exactly conform to respective contact surfaces on the preformed sleeve member 12.
The term "conform" as used herein and in the claims, means "identically coinciding with" and specifically describes the intimate contact between mating surfaces at least one of which is formed, in situ, against the other surface, such as by pressing them together in a die. Press formed articles shaped in separate dies characteristically do not have sufficient compliance between respective mating surfaces to satisfy the definition of "conform" as used herein. Therefore, "conform" explicitly describes the shape and contour relationship of respective mating surfaces of the tube 18, the upset flange 16 and the sleeve 12 when the flange 16 is formed in situ against the preformed sleeve 12.
Another significant benefit of the above described method for forming the flange 16 integrally with the sleeve 12 is that there will be no undesirable die marks imprinted upon the formed tube surfaces. As discussed above, die marks near the fillet 20 of the tube 18 are undesirable. The method discussed herein may form die marks on the outer surface 22 of the tube 18; however, these die marks are not near the tube fillet 20.
Industrial Applicability
A tube assembly 10 having a double upset flange 16 integrally formed with a rigid sleeve member 12 as described above, is particularly useful in high pressure and severe vibration applications such as hydraulic systems for heavy construction equipment.
It has been found that the integrally formed tube and sleeve arrangement improves fatigue life by as much as 40 percent in comparison with similar tube assemblies in which the flange is not formed in situ against the sleeve. Furthermore, the integrally formed upset tube and sleeve assembly is much more economical to produce than brazed assemblies.
Other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention can be obtained from a study of the drawings, this disclosure, and the appended claims.

Claims

Claims
1. A high pressure tube assembly (10) having improved fatigue life including: a load-bearing and fluid-carrying tube member (18) having a longitudinal axis (54) at one end (34) thereof and an outer surface (22) ; a rigid sleeve member (12) surrounding the tube member (18) at the one end (34) thereof, the rigid sleeve member (12) being generally L-shaped in cross section and having a first portion (13) circumscribing said tube member (18) and a radial portion (14) extending outwardly from one end of the first portion (13) , the first portion (13) having a cylindrical inner surface (52) , the radial portion having an outer surface (35) extending in a plane perpendicular to said axis (54) , and a compound curved interconnecting surface (56) extending between said portion surfaces (35,52); and the tube member (18) having a double upset flange (16) at said one end, an end portion (34) adjacent the double upset flange (16) and expanded outwardly to conform with the first portion (13) of the rigid sleeve member (12) , a compound curved fillet (20) intermediate the double upset flange (16) and the outwardly expanded end portion (34) and conforming with the corresponding compound curved surface (56) of the rigid sleeve member (12) , the double upset flange (16) having a first radially outwardly extending wall portion (48) and a second radially inwardly extending wall portion (50) , said first and second wall portions (48,50) having surfaces disposed in abutting relationship, the outwardly extending wall portion (48) having a proximal surface (24) with respect to said outer surface (35) of the rigid sleeve member (12) opposite its first surface and conforming with the outer sleeve surface (35) , and the inwardly extending wall portion (50) having a distal face (62) lying in a plane perpendicular to said axis (54) ; whereby the tube member (18) conforms with said surfaces of the rigid sleeve member (12) and provide a high pressure tube assembly (10) .
2. A tube assembly (10) as set forth in Claim 1, wherein said radial portion (14) of said rigid sleeve (12) has an inner surface opposite and substantially parallel to said outer surface (35) of the radial portion (14) , and said assembly includes a connection member (26) having an opening (32) extending therethrough and a shoulder (30) , and being mountable in circumscribing relationship about said first portion (13) of the rigid sleeve member (12) and spaced from said tube (18) with said shoulder (30) in contact with said inner surface of the rigid sleeve member (12) .
3. A tube assembly (10) as set forth in Claim 1, wherein said radial portion (14) of said rigid sleeve (12) has an inner surface opposite and substantially parallel to said outer surface (35) of the radial portion (14) , and said assembly (10) includes a connection member (26) having an opening (32) extending therethrough and a shoulder (30) , and being mountable in circumscribing relationship about said first portion (13) of the rigid sleeve member (12) and spaced from said tube (18), said shoulder (30) contacting only the inner surface of the rigid sleeve member (12) when the tube assembly (10) is connected to another member.
4. A tube assembly (10) as set forth in Claim 1, wherein said tube member end portion (34) adjacent to said double upset flange (16) has an inside surface being of a size defined substantially by a first inside diameter, and said inwardly extending portion (50) of the double upset flange (16) extends inwardly to a second size defined substantially by a second inside diameter, the second inside diameter being no greater than the first inside diameter.
5. A method for forming a tube assembly (10) having a double upset radially extending flange (16) extending perpendicularly to an axis of the tube assembly (10) and at an end of a tube member (18) of the tube assembly (10) and supported by an L-shaped sleeve member (12) having a first portion (13) extending along the axis of the tube member (18) in intimate contact with an outer surface of the tube member (18) , a radial portion (24) extending radially outwardly and an inner portion (33) in intimate contact with an outwardly extending surface of the flange (16) adjacent and perpendicular to the first portion (13) , and a compound interconnecting surface (20) extending between the radially outwardly extending portion (24) and the first portion (13) and in intimate contact with a compound curved fillet extending from the outer surface of the tube member (18) and the outwardly extending surface of the double upset flange (16) and having an outer surface, said method comprising: inserting an end portion (34) of the tube member (18) into the sleeve member (12) ; positioning the outwardly radially extending portion of the sleeve member (12) at a predetermined distance from the end of the tube member (18) ; holding the sleeve member (12) in fixed relation to the end of the tube member (18) in an internal cavity (38) of a split die (36) ; expanding the tube member (18) outwardly into intimate contact with the sleeve member (12) with a punch (44), said punch (44) extending into the end of the tube member (18) ; and upsetting the end of the tube member (18) , thereby forming the double upset radial flange (16) against the outer surface of the radial portion of the sleeve member (12) while expanding the tube member (12) against an inner cylindrical surface of the first portion of the sleeve member (12) circumscribing the tube member (18) and forming the tube end against the compound curve interconnecting surface (20) of the sleeve member (12), said punch (44) maintaining a diameter of a radially inwardly extending portion of the double upset radial flange (16) substantially equal to the inner diameter of the tube member (18) and simultaneously maintaining the original inner diameter of the tube member (18) within the sleeve member (12) .
6. A method for forming a tube assembly (10) having a double upset radially extending flange (16) extending perpendicularly to an axis of the tube assembly (10) and at an end of a tube member (18) of the tube assembly (10) and supported by an L-shaped sleeve member (12) having a first portion (13) extending along the axis of the tube member (18) in intimate contact with an outer surface of the tube member (18), a radial portion (24) extending radially outwardly and an inner portion in intimate contact with an outwardly extending surface of the flange (16) adjacent and perpendicular to the first portion (13) and a compound interconnecting surface (20) extending between the radially outwardly extending portion (24) and the first portion (13) and in intimate contact with a compound curved fillet extending from the outer surface of the tube member (18) and the outwardly extending surface of the double upset flange (16) and having an outer surface, said method comprising: inserting the sleeve member (12) and the tube member (18) into a split die (36) , said the tube member (18) extending a predetermined distance through the sleeve member (12) to provide sufficient material for the double upset radial flange (16) and said sleeve member (12) supported in a cavity of the split die (36) to serve as a portion of the forming surface in the cavity (38) ; closing the die, clamping the sleeve member (12) and the tube member (18) therein; forcing a punch (44) into the end fportion of the tube member (18) and forming a first radially outwardly extending wall portion (48) and a second radially inwardly extending wall portion (50) , said first and second wall portions (48,50) being formed in abutting relationship with respect to one another and into intimate contact with the outer surface of the sleeve member (12) ; and expanding the end portion of the tube member (18) against an inner cylindrical surface of a first portion of said sleeve member (12) circumscribing the tube member (18) , and forming the tube end against the compound curved interconnecting surface (20) of the sleeve member (12) , said punch (44) maintaining a diameter of a radially inwardly, extending portion of the double upset radial flange (16) substantially equal to the inner diameter of the tube member (18) and maintaining the original inner diameter of the tube member (18) within the sleeve member (12) .
PCT/US1990/002967 1989-07-14 1990-05-29 A high pressure tube assembly and method of manufacture WO1991001466A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
BR909007528A BR9007528A (en) 1989-07-14 1990-05-29 HIGH PRESSURE TUBE ASSEMBLY AND METHOD FOR MOLDING A TUBE ASSEMBLY

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US379,857 1982-05-19
US07/379,857 US4980961A (en) 1989-07-14 1989-07-14 Method of forming a double upset tube assembly

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO1991001466A1 true WO1991001466A1 (en) 1991-02-07

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US (1) US4980961A (en)
EP (1) EP0482073A1 (en)
JP (1) JPH04506632A (en)
AU (1) AU631904B2 (en)
BR (1) BR9007528A (en)
CA (1) CA2057074A1 (en)
WO (1) WO1991001466A1 (en)

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Also Published As

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JPH04506632A (en) 1992-11-19
US4980961A (en) 1991-01-01
BR9007528A (en) 1992-06-23
AU5962090A (en) 1991-02-22
CA2057074A1 (en) 1991-01-15
AU631904B2 (en) 1992-12-10
EP0482073A1 (en) 1992-04-29

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