Latest Technology/Processes For Welded and Riveted Joints New Technology For Welding Aluminum
Latest Technology/Processes For Welded and Riveted Joints New Technology For Welding Aluminum
Latest Technology/Processes For Welded and Riveted Joints New Technology For Welding Aluminum
The F-150 is the primary high-volume vehicle to utilize a lot of aluminum. Portage amasses the same
number of units of its prominent pickup in a month as all other aluminum-bodied vehicles joined sell
every year. The aluminum body is joined with auxiliary glue and 4,000 bolts versus 7,000 spot welds on
a customary steel pickup.
While aluminum keeps on making advances into the automobile business, steel isn't going to blur
away. It will keep on being a critical material in Detroit for quite a long time. Actually, Ford engineers
expanded their utilization of high-quality steel in the new F-150 edge from 23 percent to 77 percent to
improve firmness and sturdiness, while lessening weight.
Customarily, aluminum vehicles have been collected with auxiliary cements and bolts. Since higher
generation volumes upset cement use, automakers have depended on self-puncturing bolts to join
aluminum body parts.
Be that as it may, bolts include cost, and riveting weapons have a restricted scope of joint setups.
What's more, while this methodology can be utilized to join lower-quality steels with aluminum, it isn't
appropriate for joining aluminum to ultra-high-quality steel.
The illustration below shows the developed robotic percussive riveting system. It includes a 6-
DOF industrial robot that replaces the first worker for holding/moving a percussive rivet gun; a 5-axis
computer numerical control (CNC) gantry system that replaces the second worker for holding/moving a
bucking bar. The entire riveting process is automated through synchronization between the robot and
gantry. Furthermore, the choice of a gantry system instead of a second robot allows it to serve as a jig
for mounting sheet metals.
Industrial Application
Industrial Application
1. Shipbuilding Industry for production of large aluminum panels for ship decks
2. Aerospace Industry for manufacture of large tanks for satellite launch vehicles and lightweight
aluminium airframe structures for commercial and military aircraft.
3. Automotive Industry for high-volume production of components (e.g. light alloy wheels and
fuel tanks
References:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0927796X05000768
https://www.assemblymag.com/articles/91863-new-technology-for-welding-aluminum
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40436-013-0014-5