1 / 24

Fasteners and Welding

Fasteners and Welding. Lecture 22. What’s Coming Up?. Today Fasteners & Welding Tuesday Working Drawing Set Wednesday Measurements Lab Thursday Quiz on Fasteners and Welding Introduction to AutoDesk Inventor. Fasteners and Welding. Objectives:

Download Presentation

Fasteners and Welding

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fasteners and Welding Lecture 22 Autumn Quarter

  2. What’s Coming Up? • Today • Fasteners & Welding • Tuesday • Working Drawing Set • Wednesday • Measurements Lab • Thursday • Quiz on Fasteners and Welding • Introduction to AutoDesk Inventor Autumn Quarter

  3. Fasteners and Welding • Objectives: • Understand importance of fasteners, learn how to specify threaded fasteners and represent them in drawings and learn about other fastening methods. • Understand basics of welding symbols Autumn Quarter

  4. Topics For Today • Importance of fastening • Threaded fasteners • Non-threaded fasteners • Other machine elements • Adhesives • Welding Autumn Quarter

  5. Importance of Fastening • 50% of production time for the average item is spent on assembly/fastening. • Fasteners are critical to product performance and reliability • Choosing the proper fasteners is an important part of product design Autumn Quarter

  6. Three Methods Commonly Used in Fastening • Mechanical Fastening • Bolts, screws, rivets, keys, pins • Paper clips, zippers, “Velcro” • Bonding • Welding, soldering, brazing, gluing • Forming • Sheet metal, plastic snaps parts Autumn Quarter

  7. Threaded Fasteners – Terminology External Threads Autumn Quarter

  8. Threaded Fasteners – Terminology • Internal threads • Threads inside a hole • Made by drill & tap: • drill smooth hole • make threads with a tap Autumn Quarter

  9. Threaded Fasteners – Terminology • Bolt - head on one end, threads on other end, used with a nut • Stud - rod threaded at both ends • Cap screw - head on one end, threads on other end, NOT used with a nut • Machine screw - similar to cap screw but smaller • Set screw - used to prevent 2 rotating parts from moving separately Autumn Quarter

  10. Threaded Fasteners – Specification Example of a typical thread specification (in inches) • .5 - major diameter of .5 inches • 28 - 28 threads per inch • UN - form Unified (i.e. shape of the thread)* • C - series (C means coarse), F (fine), EF (extra fine) .5 - 28 UNC - 3 B *There are several thread forms. UN is common. Autumn Quarter

  11. Threaded Fasteners – Specification Continuation of example of a typical thread specification (in inches) • 3 - class of fit (3 is precise, 2 is normal, 1 is loose fit) • B - internal thread (A is for external) .5 - 28 UNC - 3 B Autumn Quarter

  12. Threaded Fasteners – Specification Example of a typical metric thread specification • M - indicates thread form is metric • 6 - major diameter in millimeters • 1 - pitch in millimeters • 4H5H - tolerance (capital letters for internal thread, lower case for external thread) M6 x 1 - 4H5H Autumn Quarter

  13. 1. End View Detailed 2. Schematic Representing External Threads • Options for representing external threads in a drawing Autumn Quarter

  14. End View Unsectioned Schematic(in section) Detailed(in section) Representing Internal Threads Options for representing internal threads Autumn Quarter

  15. Non-Threaded Fasteners • Rivets • Pins • Keys • Retaining rings • Locking washers Autumn Quarter

  16. Other Machine Elements • Springs • Bushings • Bearings (See references for more details) Autumn Quarter

  17. Adhesives • Used to join thin or dissimilar materials • Seal a joint as well as bond it • Can be used to coat threads and prevent loosening Autumn Quarter

  18. Thermal Fastening • Soldering - solder (filler) melts but parts to be joined remain at low temperature • Brazing - filler is melted, and parts to be joined are heated but do not melt. Can be used to join dissimilar metals • Welding - parts to be joined and filler (if any) are melted, pressed together and then cool. (See Section 9.8 in BTG) Autumn Quarter

  19. Welding Symbol • Reference Line • Leader and arrow • Basic weld symbol (location & depth of weld) • Finish symbol • Weld symbol • Dimensions • Supplementary symbols • Tail and specifications Autumn Quarter

  20. Reference Line Leader Tail Welding Symbol Autumn Quarter

  21. Fillet Weld Weld around Opposite side Arrow side Welding Symbol – Example Specification Result Autumn Quarter

  22. Welding Symbol • Below reference line describes the ARROW side of the weld • Above the line describes the OTHER side • Joint described by symbol (fillet, square) • Numbers by symbol indicate size • Circle at joint specifies weld around Autumn Quarter

  23. References • Threaded and Other Fasteners • BTG Chapter 9, Appendices A24 – A42 • Welding • BTG Appendix B.25 Autumn Quarter

  24. Assignments • Dwg 43 – FB-1D – Fasteners • Answer questions about fasteners using the tables in the book. • Due Today • Dwg 44 – FD-3B – Welding Symbology • Add notes to the Welding Symbols as needed to make them match the schematic • Due Tuesday • Dwg 45 – Working Drawing Set • A Handout will be provided in class Autumn Quarter

More Related