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Measurement of Fixtures in Automotive Production
Measuring Systems: TRITOP
Keywords: Welding fixture, jig, clamps, adjustment pin
In automotive production, the individual parts are held in fixtures during mounting and are combined such that precise components and assemblies result.
When using large body sheet metals that are not stable themselves, it is particularly important that the fixture forces the sheet metal into the correct shape. Thus, solid welding and rebated joints can be produced and the shape of the assemblies complies with the specifications.
In production, Ford uses 60 welding fixtures in the production chain for the right and also for the left side panel. These so-called jigs can be adjusted for holding and clamping the side panel of the 3 and 5 door Ford Fiesta and the Ford Fusion.
During spot welding of the individual sheet metal parts onto the side panel, an excessive shower of sparks occurred. Probably, some jigs did not combine the sheet metals seamlessly. In order to check this assumption, the jigs need to be measured and readjusted, if required.
With the method of tactile measuring technology used so far, the jigs are removed from the production environment, set up in a measuring machine and measured there. Just measuring the jigs takes more than eight hours. Not forgetting the expensive transport of each jig.
The mobile coordinate measuring machine TRITOP is well suited to fulfill such tasks fast, efficiently and precisely on site in the production environment.
When using the TRITOP system, the clamps and adjustment pins need to be prepared for photogrammetry with reference points and measuring adapters. In addition, two scale bars and orientation crosses with coded reference points are put on the fixture. |
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| Fig. 1: Welding fixture of a side panel before measuring in the production environment (with Invar scale bars and orientation crosses) |
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| Fig. 2: Detail view of a clamping fixture to fix the sheet metals. The reference point on the bearing area is visible. |
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Now, images are taken from different viewing angles using a high-resolution measuring camera (see Fig. 4). These images are transferred to the computer via WLAN or using a memory card. From this image set, the TRITOP software automatically computes the 3D coordinates of the reference points and the measuring adapters. |
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To check the measured clamping areas, the CAD data of the side panel is loaded into the TRITOP measuring project. Fig. 6 shows the deviations of the clamping points from the loaded nominal data. Now, it becomes clear that deviations from the bearing surface of more than +/- 1 mm are the reason for the different welding qualities.
In a next step, the evaluation was automated and the required adapters were provided. The complete measurement of a jig from its preparation to the final measuring report according to Fig. 5 and 6 now takes less than two hours compared to more than eight hours when using conventional tactile methods. |
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