FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The invention relates generally to the installation of lockbolt fasteners having
shanks adapted to receive swagable collars and more particularly to devices for conveniently
presenting collars for placement on lockbolt shanks such that a swaging tool can thereafter
be applied to secure the collars to the lockbolt shanks. In particular, the invention
relates to a device for feeding lockbolt collars to a presentation position, one at
a time.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Lockbolts of the type having grooved or threaded shanks adapted to receive a swagable
metal collar have been known and in widespread use since at least as early as the
application date of U. S.
[0003] Patent No.
2,521,048 incorporated by reference into expired
U. S. Patent No. 4,852,736 assigned to Huck Manufacturing Company. A typical lockbolt comprises a head and a
shank extending from the head. In some cases, the shank is divided into two axially-spaced
portions separated by a fracture groove. The portion closer to the head is provided
with convolutions or grooves, onto which a collar is swaged. The shank portion farther
from the head is called a "pintail" and is broken off by the swaging tool.
[0004] In practice, lockbolts are placed in holes already formed in the work pieces to be
joined. Thereafter, a worker assigned to finish the installation of the lockbolts
places collars on one or more lockbolt shanks and then applies the swaging tool to
set (swage) the collars and, where applicable, break off the pintail. This is done
lockbolt-by-lockbolt in sequence. A worker typically swages collars in groups of,
for example, 6 to 12 collars, and then rests his or her arms by lowering the swaging
tool and placing collars on another set of lockbolts. We refer to the swaging of a
group of lockbolt collars in one tool-handling time as a "cycle", it being understood
that most fastening jobs involve a number of such cycles.
[0005] As a practical matter, there are several problems that can crop up in the field.
The first arises out of the fact that the article being constructed is sometimes above
the worker's head, and the lockbolt shanks may be vertical. Even if a sticky substance
like rubberized cement is used to hold the unswaged collars in place, the swaging
process may still cause collars to fall off of the lockbolt shanks before they are
swaged. In aircraft applications, dropped collars must be scrapped. This not only
reduces the efficiency of the lockbolt installation process, but also requires a worker
to prevent dropped collars from becoming "foreign object debris" (FOD).
[0006] Another problem which often arises in the field is the collection and disposal of
lockbolt shank pintails broken off during the swaging step. The typical tool simply
ejects pintails without any kind of organization or collection function. Ejected pintails
often collect on or around the workpiece or fall on the floor where they present a
safety hazard. This is another potential source of FOD. Moreover, normal collection
further reduces lockbolt installation efficiency.
[0007] A further problem on which the present invention focus is the supply of a sufficient
amount collars in a feeder device by means of a cartridge which shall be easy to handle
and refilled.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008] According to the invention a device for feeding lockbolt collars to a presentation
position, one at a time, is provided, wherein the device comprises (a) a handheld
grip device having a presentation portion and a grip portion with a supply passage,
(b) a cartridge having a spiral passage therein and connectable to the grip portion
in such a way as to communicate the spiral supply passage of the cartridge to the
supply passage of the grip portion, and (c) an air supply inlet for introducing air
into the cartridge's spiral passage at a place and in a direction to urge collars
in all of the passages toward the presentation position in the presentation portion.
In particular due to the spiral passage in the cartridge a great amount of lockbolt
collars may be accommodated in the cartridge and supplied to the presentation device
in an effective way. Furthermore, a refilling of the cartridge with new collars is
quite easy to be carried out.
[0009] In one embodiment an air supply inlet is present in the grip portion and communicates
into an air supply passage in the cartridge. The air supply inlet may be provided
at a fitting of the grip portion which is connectable to a supply of pressurized air.
Accordingly, the air supply passage and the spiral passage may be interconnected so
that pressurized air entering at a top of the air supply passage in a top end of the
cartridge travels straight down along the air supply passage where it interconnects
with a bottom of the spiral passage. The pressurized air entering the air supply passage
may thus urge collars upwardly along the spiral passage into the supply passage of
the grip portion.
[0010] For an easy refilling of the cartridge it may comprise a hole into which collars
are to be dropped when it is not connected to the grip portion. The hole is preferably
shaped to allow entry of collars only in a desired orientation. The collars may thus
just filled into the cartridge in a pre-defined orientation thereby ensuring that
they are fed to the presentation portion as intended
[0011] In order to provide for a further optimized refilling of the cartridge it may be
designed in such a way that collars, as they are dropped in the cartridge via the
hole, travel by gravity down the spiral passage until they essentially hit its bottom
and then begin to be stacked up for a top of the cartridge. In this regard the device
may designed in such a way that pressurized air supplied into the cartridge via the
air supply inlet urges collars along the spiral passage and back out through the hole
provided for refilling the cartridge and into the supply passage of the grip portion.
One single hole may thus be provided via which the cartridge may be refilled as well
as via which in use collars are transferred from the cartridge into the supply passage
of the grip portion.
[0012] In one embodiment the cartridge is designed in such a way that collars being urged
into the presentation portion form part of an immediate supply queue and, as long
as air is supplied via the air supply inlet, collars continue to move up the spiral
passage in the supply cartridge and into the supply passage in the grip portion and
from there into a passage in the presentation portion where they are held one at a
time by a resilient spring end of the presentation portion.
[0013] In one embodiment the spiral passage is dimensioned and configured to hold as many
as 300 collars in substantially side-by-side axially parallel orientation.
[0014] The grip portion may have a flared skirt holding part of a mechanism for releasably
joining it to the cartridge in order to ease attachment and release of the cartridge.
[0015] In the alternative or additionally, the grip portion and the cartridge may be connectable
by means of a detent coupling. In such an embodient the cartridge may have a pair
of spring biased detent balls which are received in diametrically opposite cavities
in a skirt of the grip portion so as to form a quick connect detent coupling.
[0016] In order to facilitate the air supply to the device the grip portion may comprise
a nozzle at the air supply inlet which nozzle enters a hole in the cartridge top.
[0017] A feeder device according to the invention may generally also combined with a handheld
collar feeder tool capable of presenting swagable lockbolt collars in such a way as
easily place them on a shank after which they are swaged by a tool. In a embodiment
hereinafter described in detail, such a collar feeder comprises a handheld tool with
a trigger that allows an operator to load a number of collars from a large capacity
magazine into a feeder tool queue ready to be fitted into lockbolts. A worker performs
the loading function by transferring collars from the magazine into the tool queue
using a transfer mechanism built into the feeder tool. The tool is configured to present
each collar in the loaded queue in such a way as to allow the worker to place the
collar onto a lockbolt shank. The worker then fits a swaging tool onto the collar
and swages it onto the lockbolt. The next collar in the loaded queue, if there is
one, then moves into the presentation position. The worker completes a cycle and reloads
the queue.
[0018] The tool may be configured such that the fully-loaded queue holds about 5-15 collars,
the number that experience shows a worker can comfortably install in one cycle. The
worker can reload the queue, fully or partially, between each swaging cycle simply
by activating the tool trigger. These numbers are given by way of example only.
[0019] In the first embodiment described and illustrated herein, the magazine queue and
the feeder tool queue are offset from one another in the queue. Collars are transferred,
one at a time, from the top of the magazine to the tool queue by repeatedly depressing
a trigger to toggle a slide. Because both the magazine and the handheld tool are connected
to a source of pressurized air, the collars in the main magazine are constantly being
urged toward the slide mechanism while the collars transferred to the tool queue are
constantly being urged toward the presentation end of the tool. The presentation end
of the feeder tool can be configured to suit the particular work in progress. Air
pressure controls may be provided.
[0020] Generally, means may be provided for systematically collecting and disposing of pintails
broken off from lockbolt fasteners on which collars are swaged. Accordingly, a swaging/pulling
tool that normally ejects broken-off pintails may be combined with a feeder device
according to the invention the tool comprising a conduit which receives ejected pintails,
one at a time, and delivers the pintails by vacuum to a container for pintails in
an organized and safe fashion, a conduit runs from the swaging tool to and through
a vacuum generator that provides for the movement of pintails from swaging tool to
the container.
[0021] Other aspects of the invention disclosed herein comprise methods of using the aforementioned
collar feed and pintail collection devices, either together as part of a system, or
individually.
[0022] Still further advantages, features and characteristics of the present invention,
as well as methods of operation and functions of the related elements of the structure,
and the combination of parts and economies of manufacture, will become more apparent
upon consideration of the following detailed description and the appended claims with
reference to the accompanying drawings, the latter being briefly described hereinafter.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE DRAWINGS
[0023] The description herein makes reference to the accompanying drawings wherein like
reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the several views and wherein:
Fig. 1 is a schematic diagram of a lockbolt installation system including a first
collar feeder and a swaging tool for installing collars on the shanks of vertically
oriented lockbolts in a workpiece which may be combined with a feeder device according
to the invention;
Fig. 2 is a perspective section of an alternative collar feeder also having a curved
end piece for holding a group of collars in a queue and presenting them to a lockbolt
shank;
Fig. 3A is a cross-sectional view of the collar feeder of Fig. 2 showing the details
of the trigger and slide mechanisms that are used to load the queue;
Fig. 3B is a cross-sectional view of the collar feeder of Fig. 1;
Fig. 4A is an exploded view of the feeder of Fig. 3B;
Fig. 4B is an exploded view of the feeder tool of Fig. 3A;
Fig. 5 is a detailed view of the feeder tool of Fig. 2 and a lockbolt ready to receive
a collar;
Fig. 6 is a schematic diagram of a swaging tool with a vacuum-operated pintail collection
feature;
Figs. 7A through 7E are perspective views of an embodiment of a feeder according to
the invention showing, in all cases, a cartridge and a grip connected to each other
but with an air supply unconnected;
Figs. 8A through 8D are perspective views of the feeder embodiment with views A-C
"X-rayed" to show internal details, and view D as a conventional section;
Figs. 9A through 9E are various views of a feeder cartridge showing how collars are
loaded into and taken out of a collar passage, how and where the air supply is connected,
and how the cartridge and grip are interconnected; and
Figs. 10A through 10H are multiple views, some in perspective, of the grip portion
of the embodiment according to the invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENTS
[0024] Referring to the drawings, and particularly to Fig. 1, there is shown a two-part
system for installing lockbolts in a workpiece 12 that, in this case, is shown simply
as two sheets 14a and 14b of metal to be fastened together. The sheets may, for example,
be aluminum sheets. The sheets are joined together by lockbolts 16 of the "pintail"
type. The system for installing lockbolts 16 comprises a feeder tool 10 for placing
swagable metal collars 28 (Fig. 2) onto the exposed shanks of lockbolts 16, and a
swaging tool 30 having a pintail collection feature including a vacuum conduit 64
further described herein with reference to Fig. 6. While the system of Fig. 1 works
to best advantage when both tools 10 and 30 are present, tool 10 may be used with
any swaging tool, and the pintail collection system associated with tool 30 may be
used without the feeder tool 10. Tools 10 and 30 are provided with pressurized air
by a regulated supply 100 that may be part of a power unit such as the GB904V available
from Gage Bilt, Inc. of Clinton Township, Michigan.
[0025] As shown in Fig. 5, each lockbolt 16 comprises a shank divided into two axially contiguous
grooved portions 20 and 22; the grooves may be annular or helical. The grooves on
the upper portion 20 receive material from metal collars 28 that are swaged onto the
upper shanks by tool 30. The grooves on the lower shank portion 22 provide grip for
the puller section of the tool 30. Between the two shank portions 20, 22 is a fracture
groove 24 that causes the lower shank portion 22 to break off as part of the installation
process. The material of the collars 28 is softer than the material of the lockbolt
shank such that the swaging tool 30 deforms the collar radially inwardly into the
grooves on shank portion 20, locking the collar 28 to the shank of the lockbolt 16
and serving effectively as a non-removable nut. The tool 30 performs the function
of pulling on the lockbolt shank while swaging the collar, thus urging the two layers
14a, 14b of sheet material together. The pulling step ultimately breaks the lower
or "pintail" portion 22 of the shank off at groove 24.
[0026] As shown in Fig. 1, the lockbolts 16 are typically arranged on the work 10 in rows
with spacings that can vary considerably but may, in a typical situation, be approximately
two to four inches apart. Although only six lockbolts 16 are shown in Fig. 1, it is
to be understood that the normal work situation may involve hundreds of lockbolts
to be installed.
[0027] Referring to Figs. 2 through 5, two somewhat different feeder tools are shown. Tool
10 has a front rear-mounted, index finger-operated trigger while tool 10' has a rear,
thumb-finger-operated trigger. The difference in trigger position gives rise to other
internal differences as hereinafter explained. The overall functions of tools 10 and
10' are, however, very much the same: they receive collars 28 from an attached magazine
32 to fill a queue within a curved end piece for placement on lockbolts. In Figs.
2 and 3A, the collar feed tool 10' comprises a grip body 26' adapted to receive a
collar supply magazine in the form of a clear plastic tube 32 having an interior channel
37 that is rectangular in cross-section. The tube 32 is long enough to hold from,
for example, 50 to 200 collars in side-by-side adjacent relationship. The interior
dimensions of the channel 37 are such as to provide a low-friction fit, but are tight
enough to prevent the collars from tumbling or cocking while within the magazine.
The magazine queue is sometimes referred to as a "supply queue" in this document.
[0028] Collars 28 are loaded into the magazine tube 32, after which the tube is connected
to the tool 10 or 10' by insertion into a channel 39 and to a source of air pressure
which urges the collar stack toward the tool. The source is preferably regulated so
as to neither underdrive nor overdrive the collars toward the tool. The collars are
pushed by air toward a transfer mechanism within the grip 26' as hereinafter described.
A quick connect feature (not shown) may be used to join the magazine 32 to the tool
in such a way as to hold it securely in use, but allow easy removal for reloading
and service.
[0029] Referring to the embodiment of Figs. 2, 3A and 4B, the tool 10' comprises an upper
body 30 having two main sections: a transfer section 38 that bolts onto the grip 26',
and an integral, curved end piece 34' having an interior channel 42 long enough to
hold a working queue of 5 to 15 collars for a cycle of installations. Transfer section
38 has a slidebolt passage 44 to receive a trigger/slidebolt 46' and a bias spring
48. Slidebolt 46' has an exposed end and provides a plunger-type trigger an operator
can depress repeatedly to transfer collars from the magazine supply queue to the working
queue within tool 10'. The passage 44 communicates with the magazine passage 39 and
the end piece passage 42. The passages 39, 42 are offset from one another. Accordingly,
the trigger/slidebolt 46' can transfer collars, one at a time, from passage 39 to
passage 42 until the end piece 34 is loaded to the worker's satisfaction. The air
pressure bleeding from magazine 32 into tool 10' moves each collar up to the end 43
of end piece 34'.
[0030] The number of collars needed to fill the working queue can vary, but can be chosen
to match or slightly exceed the number of collars a worker can comfortably swage in
a cycle of tool handling. This can be, for example, from 5 to 15 collars. After holding
the feeder 10' in the left hand and the swaging tool in the right hand and raising
both of them to a work position long enough to place and swage 8 or 10 collars, the
typical worker is ready to lower the tools and relax his or her arms for a few moments.
The working queue in the track piece 34' can be refilled during this rest period.
These numbers are all given by way of example and are not limiting.
[0031] The slidebolt channel 44 is closed by a block 60. The channel 42 is covered by plates
56 and 58. Plate 56 can be metal or, preferably, a clear plastic that allows the worker
to see how many collars are in the working queue. Plate 58 incorporates an integral
retainer spring 54 that wraps around the open end of the piece 34' to prevent the
escape of collars 28 until the worker pulls the tool 10' away from a lockbolt shank.
Both plates 56, 58 are held in place by machine screws. The end of piece 34' is relieved
as shown to expose the trough-bore of the collar in the presentation position.
[0032] To summarize, the magazine tube 32 provides a supply queue of collars 28 to be installed
whereas the tool 10' can be loaded up with only as many collars as the worker is comfortable
installing in a single cycle of tool manipulations. The trigger 46' is repeatedly
pressed by the worker to transfer collars 28 from the supply magazine 32 to the working
queue in the track piece 34' between each installation cycle or whenever he/she chooses.
Air pressure urges the collars from the magazine toward the end of the tool 10'. The
end piece 34' need not have the curved configuration illustrated, but can be designed
to fit a particular job by presenting collars in an orientation that allows them to
be transferred onto a lockbolt shank.
[0033] Figs. 1, 3B and 4A show a different, embodiment of the tool 10. The main difference
in this embodiment is the relocation of the trigger 46 to the front of the tool where
it can be operated by a worker's index finger. The trigger 46 still functions as a
spring-based slide to move collars 28, one at a time, from the magazine channel to
the tool queue 42 to load the end piece 34 as desired. As shown in Fig. 3B, the end
piece 34 is reconfigured so the channel 42 is moved to the rear of the magazine channel
39.
[0034] Another set of differences between tools 10 and 10' is shown in Fig. 4A. The channel
42' is covered by a clear plastic plate 58' that extends the full length of the channel
42'. In addition, the spring plate 54' is moved to the back side of the end piece
34 so it does not prevent the operator from seeing if a collar is in the install position.
A variable bleed regulator 72 may be placed on the back of the end piece 34' to adjust
air pressure in the channel 42' separately from the pressure in the magazine 32. Alternatively,
small bleed holes may be drilled into plate 58' to reduce air pressure in channel
42'.
[0035] The working end of track pieces 34 and 34' are notched to form top and bottom U-shaped
openings 43. The top opening 43 may be chamfered as shown. The vertical height of
channels 42 is such as to accommodate therebetween the collars 28 with the axis of
the throughhole oriented in such a way as to extend through the U-shaped openings
43 in the end of channels 42. Plate 58 is trifurcated at the right end as shown in
Fig. 4B to form the spring 54 that wraps around the side of a collar 28 at the top
of the queue to prevent it from going beyond the presentation position at the end
of the queue until the operator pulls the tool away from a lockbolt onto which a collar
has been placed. The spring is flexible enough to allow this release function, but
not so flexible as to allow collars to be blown out by air pressure alone. The springs
54 and 54' have enough flexibility along their length such that as the worker pulls
the feeder tool 10 away from the lockbolt shank on which a collar 28 in the staging
area has been placed, and the swaging tool 30 has been brought into place immediately
below the collar, the springs 54 and 54' release the installed collar allowing the
swaging tool 30 to be pushed fully into place around the collar to carry out the swaging
operation. The next collar in the queue passage 42 moves into position at the end
of piece 34 or 34'.
[0036] Looking to Fig. 6, the swaging/pintail fracturing tool 30 may take any of a variety
of forms. A suitable ejector-type tool is available from Gage Bilt, Inc. of Clinton
Township, Michigan and is identified as the GB204SHRB installation tool. The tool
has air lines 31 connected to a power unit to operate a cylinder that controls a collet
and a puller in body 62, a known manner by operating a trigger 61. Jaws 60 hold a
broken-off pintail 63a until the tool 30 is applied to the next lockbolt. At this
time, the entering pintail displaces the pintail 63a to the position of pintail 63b
at which time it is pulled through conduit 64 by vacuum from a generator 66. The vacuumed
pintail goes through the generator 66 and a second conduit 68 which empties into a
container 70 that can be emptied from time to time.
[0037] During the process of collar installation described above, the pintails of the lockbolts
16 are fractured off of the shanks of the lockbolts 16 since they are not needed as
part of the installed fastener. In normal circumstances, the fractured pintails are
simply ejected through the tool 30. In the system of Fig. 7, the broken-off pintails
are collected and deposited in a container 70 for disposal.
[0038] In summary, the feeder tool 10 or 10' allows a worker to perform a staging function
for collars, one at a time, in such a way as to make it easy for the worker to locate
those collars, one at a time, on the extending shanks of lockbolts 16. This eliminates
the practice of hand-placing the collars on a number of lockbolt shanks prior to the
application of a swaging tool. After the feeder 10 or 10' has been used to locate
a collar onto a lockbolt shank, the swaging tool 30 is brought into place. The feeder
tool 10 or 10' is withdrawn, the tool 30 is pushed further onto the shank and the
collar is swaged onto the lockbolt shank as described above. The broken-off pintail
goes into the ejection chamber of the tool 30, forcing the previously broken-off pintail
through the tool and into the vacuum system where it is swept into the container 70
for safe and organized disposal at a later time. This process continues until the
feeder queue in end piece 34 or 34' is empty. The operator then refills the queue
with as many collars as he or she feels comfortable installing in a single cycle.
The large magazine 32 provides a much longer queue, which the worker needs to refill
only after a large number of cycles have been carried out. The worker may perform
the foregoing process with tool 10 or 10' in one hand and tool 30 in the other hand.
As each collar is put in place on a lockbolt shank, another collar takes its place
in the presentation queue. The pintail in the tool causes the previously gripped pintail
to be pushed into the vacuum tube 64 where it is taken to the container 70.
[0039] Whereas Figs. 1 to 6 are mainly provided for illustrating the general concept and
show features which may be also present in a feeder device according to the invention
or in a system having such a feeder device, Figs. 7A to 7E, 8A to 8D, 9A to 9E and
10A to 10H show a first embodiment of a collar feeder according to the invention.
The embodiment comprises an assembly 100 having three main parts: a grip portion or
grip 102, a cylindrical cartridge 104 and a curved presentation portion or presentation
piece 106 forming an end point with a spring that holds collars in a semi-exposed
position where they may be placed onto a lockbolt shank and resiliently released onto
the shank in the same manner as the end point device 34 functions in the previously
described embodiment. Describing the assembly 100 in greater detail, the grip 102
is dimensioned and configured so as to be comfortably held in the hand of the operator.
It has a flared skirt 107 holding part of a mechanism for releasably joining it to
the cartridge 104 as well as a fitting 108 which is connectable to a supply of pressurized
air as hereinafter described. No further detail is given with respect to the presentation
piece 106 since it may be identical to part 34 and/or 34' as previously described.
[0040] Looking to Fig. 8, the cartridge is shown to have a spiral shaped interior passage
112 which is dimensioned and configured to hold as many as 300 collars in substantially
side-by-side axially parallel orientation. The collars are dropped into a hole 118
which is shaped to allow entry of the collars only in the desired orientation as best
shown in 9B. As they are dropped in, the collars travel by gravity down the spiral
path 112 until they essentially hit bottom and them begin to be stacked up for the
top of the cartridge. The cartridge 104 has a pair of spring biased detent balls 122
which are received in diametrically opposite cavities in the skirt 107 of the grip
102 so as to form a quick connect coupling. When coupled, the air supply inlet fitting
108 of the grip causes air to enter the top of passage 114 in the top end of the cartridge
as shown in Figs. 8B and 9D. The air pressure then travels straight down along the
passage 114 shown in Fig. 8D where it interconnects with the bottom of the spiral
passage thereby to urge the collars upwardly along the spiral passage and back out
through the hole 118 and into a supply passage 124 of the grip102 as shown in Fig.
8D. From there, the collars travel up into the presentation piece 106 where they form
part of the immediate supply queue. As long as air is supplied, collars continue to
move up the spiral passage in the supply cartridge and into the passage 102 in the
grip and the curved passage in the presentation piece 106 where they are held one
at a time by the resilient spring end of the presentation piece 106. As described
above, collars may be easily and resiliently pulled out of the spring grip in the
end of the presentation piece 106.
[0041] When collars are exhausted, the air supply is shut down or removed, collars are again
loaded into the cartridge through the hole 118 where they travel down the spiral passage
until the passage is again loaded to the extent deemed sufficient by the operator.
In a commercial embodiment, we have found that the cartridge capable of holding approximately
300 collars is deemed sufficient, but larger and smaller cartridges can of course
be designed and built.
[0042] It will be noted that while the first embodiment described above has a trigger mechanism
for transferring cartridge from the supply queue to the presentation queue, the second
embodiment does not have such a trigger mechanism. The absence of the trigger mechanism
does not in any way impair the utilitarian value of the presentation device as collars
are still presented one at a time in such a partially exposed fashion as to allow
them to be readily placed onto the shank of the lock bolt regardless of the orientation
of the lockbolt. The tool is then brought into engagement with the shank of the lockbolt,
while the feeder mechanism is withdrawn, leaving the collar in place. The collar is
thereafter swaged as is well known to those familiar with this technology.
[0043] Fig. 10 shows the grip portion 102 to have an interior passage 124 for transferring
the collars in the correct orientation from the cartridge 104 to the presentation
piece 106. The figures also show how air is transferred from the fitting 108 to the
nozzle 122 which enters into the hole 120 in the cartridge top shown in Fig. 9B.
[0044] While the invention has been described in connection with what are presently considered
to be the most practical and preferred embodiments, it is to be understood that the
invention is not to be limited to the disclosed embodiments. For example, tools 10
and 10' may be reconfigured to align the magazine channel with the tool queue so that
one trigger activation fills the entire tool queue, thus eliminating the need for
repeated triggering action. In this case, the slidebolts simply block or unblock the
route from magazine to hand tool as the worker wishes.
1. A device for feeding lockbolt collars to a presentation position, one at a time, comprising:
a handheld grip device (102, 106) having a presentation portion (106) and a grip portion
(102) with a supply passage (124),
a cartridge (104) having a spiral passage (112) therein and connectable to the grip
portion (102) in such a way as to communicate the spiral supply passage (112) of the
cartridge (102) to the supply passage (124) of the grip portion (102), and
an air supply inlet for introducing air into the cartridge's spiral passage (112)
at a place and in a direction to urge collars (28) in all of the passages (112, 124)
toward the presentation position in the presentation portion (106).
2. The device according to claim 1, wherein the air supply inlet is in the grip portion
(102) and communicates into an air supply passage (114) in the cartridge (104).
3. The device according to claim 2, wherein the air supply inlet is provided at a fitting
(108) of the grip portion (102) which is connectable to a supply of pressurized air.
4. The device according to claim 2 or 3 , wherein the air supply passage (114) and the
spiral passage (112) are interconnected so that pressurized air entering at a top
of the air supply passage (114) in a top end of the cartridge (104) travels straight
down along the air supply passage (114) where it interconnects with a bottom of the
spiral passage (112) thereby to urge the collars (28) upwardly along the spiral passage
(112) into the supply passage (124) of the grip portion (102).
5. The device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the cartridge (104) has
a hole (118) into which collars (28) are to be dropped to fill the cartridge (102)
when it is not connected to the grip portion (102).
6. The device according to claim 5, wherein the hole (118) is shaped to allow entry of
collars (28) only in a desired orientation.
7. The device according to claim 5 or 6, wherein the cartridge (104) is designed in such
a way that collars (28), as they are dropped in the cartridge (104) via the hole (118),
travel by gravity down the spiral passage (112) until they essentially hit its bottom
and then begin to be stacked up for a top of the cartridge (104).
8. The device according to claim 4 and one of the claims 5 to 7, wherein pressurized
air supplied into the cartridge (104) via the air supply inlet urges collars (28)
along the spiral passage (112) and back out through the hole (118) and into the supply
passage (124) of the grip portion (102).
9. The device according to claim 1, wherein the cartridge (104) is designed in such a
way that collars (28) being urged into the presentation portion (106) form part of
an immediate supply queue and, as long as air is supplied via the air supply inlet,
collars (28) continue to move up the spiral passage (124) in the supply cartridge
(104) and into the supply passage (124) in the grip portion (102) and from there into
a passage (42, 42') in the presentation portion (106) where they are held one at a
time by a resilient spring end of the presentation portion (106).
10. The device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the spiral passage (112)
is dimensioned and configured to hold as many as 300 collars in substantially side-by-side
axially parallel orientation.
11. The device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the grip portion (102)
has a flared skirt holding part (107) of a mechanism for releasably joining it to
the cartridge (104).
12. The device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the grip portion (102)
and the cartridge (104) are connectable by means of a detent coupling.
13. The device according to claim 12, wherein the cartridge (104) has a pair of spring
biased detent balls (122) which are received in diametrically opposite cavities in
a skirt (107) of the grip portion (102) so as to form a quick connect detent coupling.
14. The device according to one of the preceding claims, wherein the grip portion (102)
comprises a nozzle (122) at the air supply inlet which nozzle (122) enters a hole
(120) in the cartridge top.