Title of Invention

AN ARRANGEMENT FOR CONNECTING END PORTIONS OF TWO STRIPS

Abstract An arrangement for connecting end portions of two strips (1, 5), wherein the end portion of one (1) of the strips comprises a protrusion (21) extending in the longitudinal direction of the strip (1) and engaging a matching recess in the other strip (5), said protrusion (21) having laterally projecting stubs (23, 25, 27, 29) which engage lateral enlarged portions of said recess, and wherein the end portion of said one strip (1) has a projecting portion (41, 43) in the vicinity of either one of its longitudinal edges, said projecting portions (41, 43) extending in said longitudinal direction and engaging complementary recesses in the said other end portion of said other strip (5), characterised in that said protrusion (21) has on either side at least two laterally projecting stubs (23, 25, 27, 29) which are mutually spaced apart in said longitudinal direction and engage lateral enlarged portions of said recess, and said protrusion (21) and projecting portions (41, 43) have an overall rounded contour.
Full Text The present invention relates to an arrangement for connecting end portions of two strips and to a clamping ring fitted with the connecting arrangement.
When clamping tubular elements on a corresponding peripheral zone of a cylindrical structure such as a shaft or another pipe, so-called clamping ring known per se are used.
Such clamping rings fitted with so-called ears are known in practice but inappropriate in some cases. In particular, lack of space may preclude accommodating the ears.
In such instances so-called clamping or compression rings have been found practical: these are externally shrunk-on or compressed, or else they stretch the cylindrical structure to press the two pipes against each other.
Such clamps and compression rings are manufactured by sawing, stamping or cutting annular segments from or out of pipes of appropriate diameters. Such manufacture however incurs drawbacks because:
(a) the newly made pipes must be deburred at the outer longitudinal ring sides, i.e., a further processing stage is required,
(b) only non-oxidizing materials can be used, not for instance galvanized pipes, the rings being damaged at the longitudinal sides, in other words galvanizing is lacking there, and
(c) only one ring size can be manufactured from the pipe diameter.
Another manufacturing procedure consists in "averting" the so-called support washers, substantial forces being required and the large inner stresses being present in the ring. Once a ring"s size is given, rings of arbitrary diameters cannot be made.

Another way might be to manufacture a ring from an appropriate strip segment cut out of an endless belt, namely by bending the segment in circular manner. However It was found that the connection of the two ends of the segment are a weak point and in particular cannot withstand tension or butting.
The German patent 40 09 259 discloses a system connecting two terminal strip segment edges in order to make a clamp or a so-called shrink ring which in particular can withstand tensile and compressive stresses. This junction may be improved further in that laser spot welds are used along the junction line of the mutually engaging segments, or by using-swaged segments. Such a junction, disclosed in said German patent 40 09 259, is shown in Fig. 1. However, where comparatively narrow strips, or shrink rings, are involved, especially if made of aluminum, it was found such a junction allows only a small load, i.e. it will rupture at high tension.
A further system is proposed in the German patent document 40 21 746, wherein again two free strip ends are joined to each other using a central tenon with coniferous engaging junction elements. However this German patent 40 21 746 incurs the drawback that, in order to prevent sideways shearing of the shackles resting against both sides of the tenon, the engaging junction elements are designed at acute angles in barbed manner, entailing a significant danger of injury in handling corresponding clamping or tightening rings.
Accordingly it is an objective of the present invention and based on a junction of two terminal strip edges as shown in the German patent 40 09 259 which on one hand shall withstand higher tensile loads and which on the other hand shall be free of the drawbacks of the German patent document 40 21 746. The invention solves this problem by a system defined in claim 1.

The invention proposes that similarly to the case of the German patent 4009259, one terminal edge, or one strip segment, shall comprise a roughly tenon-shaped projection, hereafter called the tenon, which runs in the longitudinal strip direction, said tenon engaging a clearance, hereafter called the mortise, in the other strip segment, said tenon running substantially perpendicularly to the first strip segment"s edge, namely in the belt"s longitudinal direction and comprising at least two stubs mutually apart in the direction of the tenon, i.e. in the strip"s longitudinal direction and which, in the direction of the edge, i.e. in the transverse strip direction, each engage around a zone in the other strip segment.
The tenon comprises at least two stubs spaced apart in the strip"s longitudinal direction and engaging around, and at each side of the said tenon, the mortise in the other belt segment so as to geometrically interlock with it. The full contour of the tenon is rounded to preclude sharp comers whether to avert breaking off or the danger of injury.
In one embodiment variation, at least some of the stubs laterally projecting from the tenon and engaging around the other strip segment are designed in such a way comprises an offset running oppositely the strip"s longitudinal direction in one strip segment.
Accordingly the present invention provides an arrangement for connecting end portions of two strips, wherein the end portion of one of the strips comprises a protrusion extending in the longitudinal direction of the strip and engaging a matching recess in the other strip, said protrusion having laterally projecting stubs which engage lateral enlarged portions of said recess, and wherein the end portion of said one strip has a projecting portion in the vicinity of either one of its longitudinal edges, said projecting portions extending in said longitudinal direction and engaging complementary recesses in the said other end portion of said other strip,characterised in that said protrusion has on either side at least two laterally projecting stubs which are mutually spaced apart in said longitudinal direction and engage lateral enlarged portions of said recess, and said protrusion and projecting portions have an overall rounded contour.

Further preferred embodiment variations of the system of the invention are stated in the dependent claims 2 through 12.
The system defined in the invention is especially applicable to manufacturing a clamp, i. e. to connect and to produce a pipe clamp, in particular a so-called clamping ring or a shrink ring.
The invention is illustratively elucidated below in relation to the attached drawings.
Fig. 1 shows a junction of two terminal strip edges disclosed in the German patent 40 09 259, in other words as known from the state of the art,
Fig. 2 shows a system of the invention to join two terminal strip edges,
Fig. 3 shows the system of Fig. 2 in exploded form.
Fig. 4 shows a clamping ring, i.e. a pipe clamp, comprising a system of the invention, in the disconnected, opened state,
Fig. 5 shows the connection of a shaft to a bellows-like pipe, i.e. a flexi-tube, when using a clamp of the invention, namely a compression ring, and
Figs. 6a, 6b are outlines of a system of the state of the art and of a system of the invention under tensile stress.
Fig. 1 shows an embodiment of a junction of two terminal strip edges which is known from the state of the art, for instance being appropriate for a pipe clamp. The two terminal strip segments 1 and 5 are joined to each other along their common edges 3 and 7. A retention element, i.e. a protrusion, namely a tenon 9 is present at the edge 3 and comprises laterally projecting stubs. The protrusion, i.e. the tenon 9 comprises two such stubs 10 and 11, said

tenon jointly with two such stubs engaging coinciding, unreferenced clearances, i.e. a mortise in the strip segment 5. By means of two stubs 10 and 11 the tenon 9 engages along the corresponding mortise in the edge direction along both zones 14 and 15.
If now the junction of Fig. 1 is tensively or compressively loaded, the zones of the strip segment 5 configured behind the zones 14 and 15 tend to move laterally away from the tenon 9 which as a result may be pulled or pushed out of the corresponding mortise. To counteract this bias toward lateral shearing by both these zones, the two protrusions 17 and 19 are configured at one edge, namely edge 3. These two protrusions 17 and 19 rest against the elements 18 and 20 of the flat strip segment 5 and in this manner counteract lateral shearing of the two zones behind the elements 18 and 20, resp. the zones 14 and 15.
Additionally, laser weld spots may be put in place along the junction lines, i.e. the edges 3 and 7, in order to enhance the junction quality. Moreover the edge may be swaged to improve this junction.
As already cited above, it was found in practice however that junctions such as shown in Fig. 1 and known from the German patent 40 09 259 no longer withstand modern high loads as regards narrow strips made of aluminum and that on occasion the tenon 9 may be torn out of the strip segment 5.
For that reason the invention presently shall propose a junction of two strip segments as shown in Fig. 2. Again the two strip segments 1 and 5 for instance of a pipe clamp must be joined, the conceptual junction edges 3 and 7 being shown by dashed lines. Again a retaining element, i.e. a protrusion, namely a tenon 21 projects from the junction edge 3 into the other strip segment 7 to engage it, though in this design the tenon comprises several longitudinally spaced stubs engaging around certain zones in the other strip segment. Fig. 2 clearly shows the stubs 23, 25, 27 and 29 laterally projecting from the tenon 21 and engaging geometrically coinciding clearances constituting the mortise, of which the elements are unreferenced again for simplicity, situated in the other strip segment 5. It was found

advantageous that said laterally projecting stubs include additionally "rearward directed" zones or offsets 31, 33, 35 and 37 that run backwards with respect to the tenon"s direction, namely resp. toward the conceptual edges 3 and 7.
Similarly to the two additional protrusions 17 and 19 of Fig. 1, the design of Fig. 2 comprises at the side of the longitudinal strip edges another protrusion 41 and 43 resp. which in this instance however and at least along a portion of the junction of the two edges runs obliquely to said strip"s longitudinal edges. Basically however the functions of the two additional protrusions 41 and 43 are the same as the two protrusions 17 and 19 in the junction system of Fig. 1.
Fig. 3 shows the junction means of Fig. 2 when taken apart. It clearly shows that the lateral stubs 23, 25, 27 and 29 comprise rearward-pointing zones, or offsets 31, 33, 35 and 37. It was found advantageous that the rearward-pointing boundary line of said offsets subtend an angle P in the range from 50 to 70°, preferably 60°, with the strip"s longitudinal direction, i.e. the longitudinal direction of the tenon 21. Advantageously again, the width of the tenon 21 between the first strip segment and the two first laterally projecting stubs 23 and 25 is larger than the width between the first laterally projecting stubs 23 and 25 and the two terminal, laterally projecting stubs 27 and 29.
As regards the two further, laterally projecting protrusions 41 and 43 in the vicinity of the strip"s longitudinal edges, the oblique boundary line preferably shall subtend an angle a in the range between about 40 to 60°, preferably 50°, with the strip"s longitudinal direction. Moreover, near each longitudinal edge of the first strip segment 1 and the second strip segment 5, a flat is provided to prevent that the two protrusions 41 and 43 terminate in sharp points. Such sharp points might break off and also might hurt personnel.
Lastly Fig. 3 clearly shows that nearly all cornerzones along the effective terminal edge of the strip segment 1 or along the second strip segment 5 are rounded off along the full

contour of the tenon 21, again to preclude forming sharp tips, both to preclude breaking off and hurting personnel.
Fig. 4 shows a clamp or clamp ring of the invention, consisting of a clamping strip with two terminal ends 1 and 5. The clamping ring is shown in the open, unjoined state. The clamping strip may be an integral or a multi-element component fitted with one or more junction elements of the invention.
The two terminal edges at the terminal strip segments 1 and 5 are fitted with junction elements similarly to the embodiments of Figs. 2 and 3. The tenon 21 comprising bilaterally projecting stubs 23, 25, 27 and 29 is configured at the strip segment 1. A matching mortise is configured in the other strip segment 5.
The further protrusions 41 and 43 are configured on the sides of the tenon 21 and again are designed to engage in corresponding clearances in the other strip segment.
Depending on the desired diameter of the clamping or compression ring, a commensurate strip segment may be cut off an endless belt. The tenon 21 together with the further two protrusions 41 and 43 are jointly stamped out of the terminal segment 1 and the corresponding mortise and clearances are jointly stamped out of the opposite strip segment 5. The clamping ring is assembled by bringing together the two terminal strip segments 1 and
5 and by bending these strip segments and joining them. As already mentioned above and
1-1
as shown being terminally situated and denoted by Si in Fig. 2, swaging or crimping sites may
be used, for instance employing laser welding or swaging, in order to complete the junction.
Fig. 5 shows a clamp of the invention or a compression ring of Fig. 4 in the joined, closed state to elucidate an actual application. A shaft 50 comprises a terminal zone 51 of a diameter larger than that of the shaft 50. A flexi-tube 53 of which the terminal segment 54 is slipped over the zone 51 must be joined firmly to the shaft 50. Illustratively such a junction is required in the automotive industry where wheel axles, drive and universal shafts are protected

by concertina walls or enclosed by them. In this design too the rubber bellows or the concertina wall is affixed to a mating part, for instance the shaft.
After the flexitube 53 with its part 54 is slipped over the zone 51, the clamping ring also is slipped on said zone 54. Again a tenon 21 moves into a corresponding mortise and the lateral other stubs rest against the matching elements of the opposite segment of the clamping strip, i.e. the compression ring 48. In order that two strip ends be joined in fixed manner to each other, the junction again may comprise swaging or crimping sites or laser-weld spots as already mentioned in relation to Fig. 4.
After the clamping or compression ring 48 has been mounted on the slipped-on zone 54, appropriate tools such as clamping jaws (omitted) are mounted around the clamping ring which is compressed on this zone 54 in order to compress said jaws. The diameter of the clamping ring is reduced by this compression and compression zones 56 are generated at the clamping ring 48. The flexitube 53 now is firmly affixed to the shaft 50. Obviously too this connection can be implemented by replacing the compression with radial expansion of the inner zone 51, whereby, finally, the clamping ring shall externally clamp the flexitube on the slipped-on zone 54 onto the inner zone 51.
The procedure elucidated in relation to Fig. 5 also can be used in joining an arbitrary number of corrugated ands tubular elements by means of a clamping or compression ring.
Figs. 6a and 6b each show the line along which a junction of the state of the art and a junction of the invention shall rupture when high loads are applied. Fig. 6a shows a junction system disclosed in the German patent 40 09 259 as indicated by Fig. 1, the tensile load in the direction of the arrow rupturing the connection along the line 61.
On the other hand the tensile load applied in the direction of the arrow in Fig. 6b to a junction of the invention will cause rupture along the line 63 and, keeping constant the width, thickness and the material of said strip, tearing occurs only at a tensile load which is higher by about 30 to 40 %. This higher tensile strength is significant, especially with respect to using

aluminum and very narrow compression rings or pipe clamps. However such higher tensile strength also is offered by other materials such as the stainless or galvanized steel, other metal alloys or by reinforced plastics.
Obviously the junction systems shown in Figs. 2 through 6 merely are illustrative embodiments which may be arbitrarily amended, modified or complemented. It is quite cleariy feasible as well to replace the shown, single tenon by several such, each of which is fitted in the longitudinal, i.e. the tenon direction, with spaced lateral stubs. Also more than two transverse elements may be configured per tenon in the longitudinal strip direction, and moreover not all lateral stubs need be fitted with rearward-pointing protrusions. The tenon width also may be varied or be made to match the strip width.
In principle all the tenon configurations described in the German patent 40 09 259 may be applied to the present junction, except that at least one tenon be fitted with at least two lateral stubs spaced apart in the longitudinal strip direction.

We claim:
1. An arrangement for connecting end portions of two strips (1 5), wherein the
end portion of one (1) of the strips comprises a protrusion (21) extending in the
longitudinal direction of the strip (1) and engaging a matching recess in the other strip
(5), said protrusion (21) having laterally projecting stubs (23, 25, 27, 29) which
engage lateral enlarged portions of said recess, and wherein the end portion of said
one strip (1) has a projecting portion (41, 43) in the vicinity of either one of its
longitudinal edges, said projecting portions (41, 43) extending in said longitudinal
direction and engaging complementary recesses in the said other end portion of said
other strip (5),
characterised in that
said protrusion (21) has on either side at least two laterally projecting stubs (23, 25, 27, 29) which are mutually spaced apart in said longitudinal direction and engage lateral enlarged portions of said recess, and
said protrusion (21) and projecting portions (41, 43) have an overall rounded contour.
2. The arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein at least one of the laterally
projecting stubs (23, 25, 27, 29) is undercut so as to interlock with the corresponding
enlarged portion of the recess in said other strip (5).
3. The arrangement as claimed in claim 2, wherein the undercut extends at an angle (P) of 50 to 70° with respect to said longitudinal direction.
4. The arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said protrusion (21) is wider at its root than in an area between said laterally projecting stubs (23, 25, 27, 29).
5. The arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein each said projecting portion (41, 43) has an inner edge extending obliquely to say longitudinal direction.

6. The arrangement as claimed in claim 5, wherein said inner edge extends at an
angle (a) of 40 to 60° with respect to said longitudinal direction.
7. The arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein the end portion of said one strip
(1) has two protrusions projecting in said longitudinal direction.
8. The arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said end portions are spot-welded along their junction line.
9. The arrangement as claimed in claim 1, wherein said end portions are swaged along their junction line.

10. A clamping ring fitted with the connecting arrangement as claimed in claim 1.
11. An arrangement for connecting end portions of two strips, substantially as hereinabove described and illustrated with reference to figures 2 to 6B of the accompanying drawings.

Documents:

in-pct-2000-0336-che absatract-duplicate.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che abstract.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che claims-duplicate.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che claims.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che correspondence-others.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che correspondence-po.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che description(complete)-duplicate.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che description(complete).pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che drawings-duplicate.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che drawings.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che form-1.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che form-13.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che form-19.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che form-26.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che form-3.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che form-5.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che others document.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che others.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che pct search report.pdf

in-pct-2000-0336-che petition.pdf


Patent Number 216239
Indian Patent Application Number IN/PCT/2000/336/CHE
PG Journal Number 13/2008
Publication Date 31-Mar-2008
Grant Date 10-Mar-2008
Date of Filing 31-Aug-2000
Name of Patentee HANS OETIKER AG MASCHINEN-UND APPARATEFABRIK
Applicant Address Oberdorfstrasse 21, CH-8810 Horgen,
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 Hans OETIKER Oberdorfstrasse 21, CH-8810 Horgen,
PCT International Classification Number F16L 33/02
PCT International Application Number PCT/CH1998/000521
PCT International Filing date 1998-12-09
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 240/98 1998-02-02 Switzerland