AU596816B2

AU596816B2 – Resistance welding of aluminium
– Google Patents

AU596816B2 – Resistance welding of aluminium
– Google Patents
Resistance welding of aluminium

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Publication number
AU596816B2

AU596816B2
AU65111/86A
AU6511186A
AU596816B2
AU 596816 B2
AU596816 B2
AU 596816B2
AU 65111/86 A
AU65111/86 A
AU 65111/86A
AU 6511186 A
AU6511186 A
AU 6511186A
AU 596816 B2
AU596816 B2
AU 596816B2
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
electrode
welding
aluminium
resistance
coating
Prior art date
1985-11-14
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)

Ceased

Application number
AU65111/86A
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AU6511186A
(en

Inventor
Peter Michael Bullivant-Clark
Nigel Cleaton Davies
Mark William Puddle
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)

Rio Tinto Alcan International Ltd

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Alcan International Ltd Canada
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
1985-11-14
Filing date
1986-11-13
Publication date
1990-05-17

1986-11-13
Application filed by Alcan International Ltd Canada
filed
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Alcan International Ltd Canada

1987-05-21
Publication of AU6511186A
publication
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patent/AU6511186A/en

1990-05-17
Application granted
granted
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1990-05-17
Publication of AU596816B2
publication
Critical
patent/AU596816B2/en

2006-11-13
Anticipated expiration
legal-status
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Status
Ceased
legal-status
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Classifications

B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING

B23—MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR

B23K—SOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM

B23K35/00—Rods, electrodes, materials, or media, for use in soldering, welding, or cutting

B23K35/02—Rods, electrodes, materials, or media, for use in soldering, welding, or cutting characterised by mechanical features, e.g. shape

B23K35/0205—Non-consumable electrodes; C-electrodes

B—PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING

B23—MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR

B23K—SOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM

B23K11/00—Resistance welding; Severing by resistance heating

B23K11/16—Resistance welding; Severing by resistance heating taking account of the properties of the material to be welded

B23K11/18—Resistance welding; Severing by resistance heating taking account of the properties of the material to be welded of non-ferrous metals

Description

COMMONWEALTH OF AUJSTALIA 5 9 68 U0M PATENTS ACT 1952-69 COMPLETE SPECIFICATION (ORIGIN ALl Class Int. Class Application Number: -6 Lodged: Complete Specification Lodged: Accepted: Published: Tlhrs doctirnent Contfains tile a 1 ei d menlts made Under SCction 49 and is correc-t foi- Printing.
‘Related Art f Jrne of Applicant: Address of Applicant: A~tual Inventor: Address for Service: ALCAN INTERNATIONAL LIMITED 1188 Sherbrooke Street West, Montreal, Quebec, Canada MARK WILLIAM PUDDLE, NIGEL 2 CLEATON DAVIES and PETER MICHAAEL BULLIVANT-CLARK EDWD. WATERS SONS, 50 QUEEN STREET, MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA, 3000.
Complete Specification for the invention entitled: RESISTANCE WELDING OF ALUMINIUM The following statement is a full description of this invention, including the best mexhod of performing it known to US
-A
S
RESISTANCE WELDING OF ALUMINIUM In aluminium resistance welding, pressure is applied to two or more contacting aluminium sheets by means of copper electrodes, while simultaneously passing a high electric current between the electrodes.
Electrical heating causes a molten nugget to form at the sheet interface at the point of pressure. This technique is one of the most useful and practical methods of joining aluminium components, because it is suitable for volume production and reduces unit costs.
Most wrought aluminium alloys, both the heat treatable and non-heat treatable types can be resistance welded.
0 SThe most important aspect of resistance welding is 0 o ,spot welding, involving the use of two small opposed 0 .0 15 electrodes. But other related techniques are known and used, including multiple spot welding (several electrodes simultaneously); projection welding _(involving the use of projections on the workpiece); and roller spot welding such as seam welding (electrodes are wheels which traverse the workpiece under pressure).
This invention is particularly, though not exclusively, concerned with automatic mass production 0involving resistance spot welding, e.g. of automotive 0 0 o 25 bodies. For these and other applications, electrode life is a major consideration. The lifetime of an electrode used for spot welding aluminium and its alloys is considerably lower than that of one used for steel. Furthermore, greater inconsistencies in weld quality are found with aluminium than with steel.
There are two major reasons for this. Aluminium is a good thermal and electrical conductor (it has about 1/3 the bulk resistance of steel). Also, the oxide film on an aluminium surface acts as a high And often variable resistance interface between electrode and workpiece. Hence typically for mild steel the Sa 2anticipated electrode life may be of the order of 4000 spot welds, whereas for aluminium it may be as low as 400.
An important aspect of resistance spot welding is the electrical resistance between electrode and workpiece (the interface resistance) and between workpiece and workpiece (the contact or faying resistance). The nugget is formed at the faying surfaces as a result of the heat produced by a short pulse of high amperage current. The various resistances of the interfaces are the governing factors in this process; a high resistance is needed at the faying surface to produce a weld, but a high outer interface resistance can result in overheating at the 15 electrode/workpiece interface with deterioration of the °electrode tip surface. Aluminium alloys in the mill finish condition suffer from this problem. Also, Sbecause of the inconsistency in the nature of the oxide I film (particularly with alloys of the 5000 series of S 20 the Aluminium Association Inc. Register), the interface resistance can be variable, and the resultant weld o quality erratic.
There have been proposals for producing aluminium alloy surfaces with differential surface resistance, i.e. a low interface resistance and a high faying resistance. These proposals include abrading the outer surface, arc cleaning of the outer surface (US Patent 3,278,720) and growing anodic oxide films of different thicknesses on the interface and faying surfaces (EPA 153149). Although these :ethods have increased electrode life, they may not be practical for operation in automatic mass production.
Another approach to increasing electrode life is described in G.B. 1,554,297. This approach involves treating the electrode surface in two ways. First, the surface is shot-peened, to provide a large number 3 of minute indentations separated by relatively sharp ridges. Then the roughened surface is provided with a coating composed of nickel, beryllium, cobalt, iron, or a high melting alloy thereof. The specification teaches that the two treatments act synergetically, and that the shot-peening treatment by itself does not significantly increase electrode life.
When the weld quality starts to deteriorate, the electrode is removed from the welding equipment and redressed at a separate location. For a conventional copper-based electrode, re-dressing merely involves the use of cutters or sanding discs contoured to the proper radius and placed between the electrodes. For coated electrodes as described in G.B 1,554,297, re-dressing involves re-coating, which is time-consuming and expensive, and the initial coated electrodes are also expensive.
CG.B. A 2,139,510 describes a method of fabricating a structure of aluminium components comprising the steps: pre-treating aluminium sheet to produce a surface layer thereon containing at least 5% by weight of chromium; forming components from the pre-treated o ,sheet; applying adhesive to the components, and assembling them in the desired structure; spot-welding the components give the structure green strength; and curing the adhesive. The combined techniques of spotwelding and adhesive bonding are known as weld-bonding.
The stated purpose of the pre-treatment is to improve adhesive bond durability. The spot-welding step is not described in any detail.
According to the present invention, the service life of welding electrodes in the resistance welding of aluminium workpieces is increased by combinations of various steps:- Forming a roughened surface on the electrode tip, and 0 o 4 4,4,4 o 48R *i 4 4,1 4, 4,4 4 4, Providing an artificially applied strongly adherent coating on the surfaces of the aluminium workpieces at the location of the intended weld, and optionally Arranging the nugget diameter in the initial welding set-up to be not more than 15% greater than the minimum acceptable nugget diameter.
These features act synergistically to provide increases in electrode service life much greater than can be achieved by any single feature alone.
The term «aluminium» is used herein to include not only the pure metal, but also Al rich alloys, particularly those of the kinds envisaged for vehicle construction such as the 2000 and 5000 and 6000 series of the Aluminum Association Inc. Register. Metal for spot-welding is generally 0.6 to 3.2 mm, most usually from 0.9 to 2.0 mm, thick.
Surface roughening of the electrode may involve the creation of ridges and indentations. Although applicants do not wish to be bound by theory, they currently believe that the ridges may be sharp enough to break through the insulating layers on the surface of the aluminium workpieces, and so create more contact points for current to flow from the electrode through the bulk aluminium. Surface roughening may :25 25 conveniently be achieved by sand-blasting. The scale of roughness is important, and can be controlled by an appropriate choice of the particle size of the material used for sand-blasting and the pressure under which it is projected against the surface. Surface roughness, as measured by a perthometer and defined as the average peak-to-valley height (DIN 4768 paragraph that is the Average Roughness Depth, Rz, is preferably at least 10 micr.ons and is more preferably from 12 to microns. The conditions required to achieve this sort of surface roughness are within the skill of the art.
0 0 44″*’ r, i II– 5 Conventional resistance spot-welding electrodes are made of alloys containing major proportions of copper. It is an advantage of this invention that such conventional electrodes can be used, after surface roughening, and without the need for a coating of any other metal or alloy.
It is well understood that there is a minimum acceptable nugget diameter for a succesful spot weld, and that this minimum diameter increases for increasing metal thickness. It is also well understood that the oo nugget diameter formed by a conventional electrode pair under set conditions decreases with age, until the diameter becomes too small and the electrodes have to be replaced. To offset this, it is conventional to S 15 provide an equipment set-up that will initially form i nuggets that are too large by a factor of about For example, the Aluminium Association TIO document at page 9 gives the following figures:- Metal thickness Minimum Weld Nugget Set up weld Nugget S(mm) Diameter (mm) Diameter (mm) 0.81 3.56 4.32 1.60 5.08 6.10 2 5 4 6.35 7.62 However, larger electrode diameters require increased welding current and result in shorter electrode working life.
When using roughened electrodes according to this invention, it has unexpectedly been found that the nugget diameter formed by an electrode pair under set conditions increases with age, and only starts to decrease again shortly before eventual electrode failure. The reason for this may be that the roughened electrode tips gradually become flattened and spread with use. Whatever, the reason, this unexpected finding permits significant economies to be I i i 6 4 0 40* o 0 o 0 0 0 a 0i 0 o P. 0 A o 0 r 6 oI0co a 0 r made in the welding set-up. Initial nugget diameters can be arranged to be no more than 15%, and often from to 10%, greater than the minimum acceptable diameter. This change in practice reduces welding current requirements and further, increases electrode working life.
According to another feature of this invention, the surfaces of the aluminium workpieces are provided with an artificially applied strongly adherent coating.
It is an advantage that this invention permits the use of aluminium surfaces with equal consistent uniform interface resistances. The surfaces are preferably pretreated to an extent to provide intermediate interface electrical resistance. As noted above, too 15 high a surface resistance can result in rapid deterioration of electrode tips. On the other hand, if the resistance at the fayiq surfaces is too low, a typical welding current may generate insufficient heat to form an adequate nugget and a strong weld.
Coating weights in the range 0.01 to preferably 0.03 to 0.2, grams per square metre are preferred. The coatings can be formed by a variety of pretreatments.
One suitable pretreatment is that marketed by Pyrene Chemical Services Ltd. under the Trademark Bonderite 735. The surface layer is believed to consist essentially of hydrated chromium phosphate, with small amounts of chromium oxide and aluminium fluoride present close to the aluminium/conversion coating interface. A recommended process sequence is spray acid clean, spray water rinses, spray application of conversion coating, spray water rinses, hot air drying.
Another preferred pretreatment is that marketed by Albright Wilson Limited under the Trademark Accomet C. This is a «no rinse» treatment and is of 7 particular interest for coil coating purposes as it involves roller application of a chromate based coating which is non-reactive and requires no subsequent rinsing. This minimises the effluent treatment required and makes the process relatively simple to control. A recommended process sequence is spray acid clean, spray water rinses, roller-coat application of Accomet C, dry.
Other suitable pretreatments include alternative chromate-phosphate coatings such as that marketed by ICI plc under the Trademark Alodine 407/47. Also suitable are anodizing treatments, for example AC anodizing in hot sulphuric acid (British Patent Specification No.1235661), and the various treatments described in GB 2139540 A.
o Organic coatings such as paints or lacquers are not strongly adherent and are not suitable.
The examples below show that the various features o r.
o b’ of this invention can be used in combination to increase electrode service life by a factor of up to 100 or even greater. They also show that, over quite a wide range of electrode surface roughening and over a «2 variety of coatings on the work pieces, electrode life can be increased to more than 2000 welds. This figure of 2000 successful welds without a change of electrodes is important, since this is the number of welds made per shift in a typical li’-e. No great expense is involved in changing and re-dressing electrodes between shifts. Since electrode life is only one of the factors involved in costing the overall resistance weld bonding process, a surface treatment other than that which gives rise to the highest possible electrode life may be preferred for other reasons, provided only that it complies with the minimum requirement of 2000 successful welds. For example for weld-bonding, a treatment which gives superior adhesive bond durability e
I.
1t-t Io 0 0 1 0 4 it i it 11 o 0 8 may be preferred to one which gives exceptionally high electrode life.
EXPERIMENTAL
Throughout the experiments, the spot welding equipment was a 75 KVA pedestal welder with a solid state electronic control system. A weld sequence was set up such that the nugget diameter was above the minimum required by the Aluminium Association document (Guidelines to resistance spot welding automotive sheet). The welding sequence used was as follows:- Squeeze 20 cycles Initial pressure 40 cycles Weld 3 cycles Weld Heat Time 3 cycles Forge Delay 1.5 cycles Quench 3 cycles Hold 5 cycles Off 20 cycles Current =19 K Amps (RMS) Electrode Approach Rate 2 6 mm/sec Weld Load 2.35 KN (520 lbs) Forge Load 4.0 KN (880 lbs) Set up Diameter 3.8mm nugget diameter for 0.875 mm gauge sheet Electrode 76 mm radius electrodes (Cu-Cr alloy) Strip Size 25 x 1000 mm Weld Space 25 mm Welding Rate up to 30 welds/min Strip Feed manual The elotrode life was defined by the number of acceptable welds made with a set of electrodes without electrode dressing and without any changes in the set 9 welding conditions. Every spot weld was examined.
The test was considered complete when any of the following conditions were met.
1. If four or more welds in a unit of 40 spot welds failed to peel.
2. The average button diameter was below the minimum value given in the Aluminum Association document below 3.6 mm).
3. The average single spot shear strength was below the minimum given in the AA T10 document.
4. A hole was blown in the sheet during welding.
5. The electrode pulled a plug out of the sheet.
Example 1 AA 5251 alloy sheet was used of 0 temper and S, 15 0.875mm gauge. The sheet had been coil pretreated Ott with the pretreatment Accomet C solution), a norinse chromate-based coating. The resistance of the pretreated material had been measured as 59 microhms for the interface resistance and 26 milliohms for the faying resistance. Another sheet of the same alloy was used in the mill finish condition for comparison.
Five types of electrode roughness were considered, these were new «as supplied» electrodes from the 0° manufacturer and electrodes shot-blasted to 4 different .25 surface conditions. The relationships between the roughness of the electrode, electrode life and the number of failures are shown in Table 1. For comparison, values with mill finish AA 5251 alloy sheet are also shown.
The increased electrode life from using pretreated sheet is demonstrated as is the optimum roughness of the electrodes. Typical shear strengths of the spots throughout the runs were between 320 and 360 lbs/spot, which is mqch higher than the AA T10 recommendation.
The quality of the welds was also excellent with little or no expulsion.
10 4 4 4 1 or *r 4 o I 4 4 41 4 An important consequence of these experiments is that during the electrode life tests, the nugget diameters increased with time. Typically during electrode life trials, a higher nugget diameter than the minimum is chosen and dliring the trial the nugget diameter will gradually fall towards the minimum value.
However previous experiments to this trial, using similar spot welding conditions, had indicated that initially there was flattening of the electrode surface coinciding with an increase in nugget size. For example in the trials above, the initial nugget diameter was chosen at 3.8mm, only about 5% more than the minimum acceptable diameter of 3.6mm. This gradually rose to 4.2mm and remained constant for the rest of the electrode life until close to failure. This effect is assumed to be associated with electrode flattening coupled with a lack of electrode pick-up.
Example 2 Previous investigations had shown that Bonderite 735 (a hydrated chromium phosphate coating) could give longer electrode life than Accomet C. This is reflected in the information in Table 2 where similar electrode finishes were used to those in Example 1 with a O.lg/m 2 Bonderite 735 coated 5251 alloy. Throughout the experiments the quality of the spot welds was excellent, being similar to that described for Accomet C. The effect of the electrode roughness on electrode life is identical to the previous example with Accomet C. The best performance was with the «coarse» electrodes when an electrode life of 20,297 was achieved. The number of failures was 515 i.e. A Bonderite 735 surface with a higher coating weight 2 of 0.2g/m was also tested using electrodes with a «medium» finish. The effect of higher interface and faying resistance is demonstrated by an electrode life of 1208 as compared to 13,748 with the lower coating
C
11 weight.
TABLE 1 Relationship between electrode roughness, sheet surface and electrode life for an Accomet C pretreated and a Mill Finish 5251 alloy 0 01 2 40 o 0 2 00 I S00 o g0 o 0 Surface Electrode Average Electrode Failures Treatment Finish Preparation Roughness Life No. Depth Rz (microns) Accomet C As Supplied 3.8 408 19 4,7 (equivalent to 0.1-0.15 9lm2 g/m 4% Accomet C Fine 180/220 A1 2 0 3 10.7 1734 40 2.3 80psi: 4% Accomet C Medium 40/20 Recycled 18.4 4759 118 Grit: 80 psi: 10 sees 4% Accomet C Coarse 46 Mesh Al20 26.1 7271 184 psi: 10 sees 4% Accomet C Very Coarse 46 Mesh Al 0 27.4 4109 97 2.4 psi: 10 secs Mill Finish As Supplied 3.8 120 5 Mill Finish Medium 18.4 512 32 6.3 Mill Finish Coarse 26.1 801 51 6.4 12 TABLE 2 Relationship between electrode roughness, sheet surface and electrode life for a Bonderite 735 pretreated 5251 alloy 0 0 0 0 a 4 0 0 4 00 0 Surface Electrode Average Elecrode Failures Yreatment Treatment Roughness Life -No. Depth Rz (microns) 0.1g/m2 Bonderite 735 As Supplied 3.8 1189 38 3.2 (Interface Resistance =64 microhms Faying Resistance 26 milliohms) 0.1g/m 2Bonderite 735 Medium 18.4 13748 382 2.7 0.lg/m 2Bonderite 735 Coarse 26.1 20297 515 Very 0.19/m 2Bonderite 735 Coarse 30.4 6261 153 2.4 0.2g/m 2Bonderite 735 Medium 18.4 1208 35 2.9 (Interface Res tance 172 microhms Faying Resistance milliohms) -13- Example 3 Two AA 2521 alloy sheets were used for this experiment which had been anodized in 10% phosphoric acid at 55 0 C at 600A/m 2 for 5 s. For sheet i) a.c. had been used and the anodic oxide film was 40 nm thick. For sheet ii) d.c had been used and the anodic oxide film was 70 nm thick. The sheets were spot-welded using electrodes with a coarse surface finish as described in Example 1.
For sheet the electrode life was 1800 welds and the failure rate was 4%.
For sheet ii), t le electrode life was 5300 welds, I including 2300 welds before the first failure, and the failure rate was i Example 4 This experiment was designed to show the effect of lubricant on electrode life. This is important because adventitious lubricant is likely to be present 2O in many situations, e.g. on a motor vehicle product~lon a: 20 line, where spot-welding is carried out.
The experimental conditions were generally as described for Example 1. AA 5251 alloy sheet had been coil pretreated with 4% Accomet C. MAO10 lubricant was applied to the pretreated coil. On spot-welding o 25 with various electrodes, the following results were obtained.
1~4
I
Electroede R7, (microns) Electrode Failures Treatment Life No. 0/ Polished 1.2 88 0 0 As supplied 6.6 105 3 2.9 Coarse 26.1 3582 20 0.6 These results demonstrate that spot-welding can be carried out in the presence of residual press lubricant.
~4
C
C 0 C 0., C 0 0 0 0
CO
C CO C Ok
C
C
‘0
C
C C ‘0
C
C
0 0

Claims (8)

1. In the resistance welding of aluminium workpieces, a method of increasing the service life of a welding electode having an uncoated electrode tip, by: forming a roughened surface on the electrode tip, and providing an artificially applied strongly adherent inorganic non metallic coating on the surface of the aluminium workpieces at the location of the intended weld.

2. A method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the resistance welding is resistance spot welding.

3. A method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the nugget ,°vo diameter formed by the initial welding set-up is arranged to be not more than 15% greater than the minimum acceptable nugget diameter.

4. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 3, ao°° wherein the electrode is of a copper-based alloy having an average roughness depth Rz of at least 10 microns. to A method as claimed in claim 4, wherein the average roughness depth is from 12 to 30 microns.

6. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to wherein the adherent coating is applied at a dry weight of from 0.01 to l.Og/m 2

7. A method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the adherent coating is applied at a dry weight of from 0.03 to 0.2 g/m 2 r r 16

8. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 7, wherein the adherent coating is applied uniformly to the entire surface of both workpieces.

9. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 8, wherein the adherent coating contains at least 5% by weight of chromium. A method as claimed in any one of claims 1 to 9, wherein the service life of the electrode is at least 2000 welds. t a DATED this 30th day of January, 1990. ALCAN INTERNATIONAL LIMITED WATERMARK PATENT TRADEMARK ATTORNEYS, 290 Burwood Road, HAWTHORN. VIC. 3122 AUSTRALIA e0a4 SKP: (PLP:KB)jl(8.32) 0 0 9 t o a 0 0 I 6 0 -3

AU65111/86A
1985-11-14
1986-11-13
Resistance welding of aluminium

Ceased

AU596816B2
(en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title

GB858528049A

GB8528049D0
(en)

1985-11-14
1985-11-14
Resistance welding of aluminium

GB8528049

1985-11-14

Publications (2)

Publication Number
Publication Date

AU6511186A

AU6511186A
(en)

1987-05-21

AU596816B2
true

AU596816B2
(en)

1990-05-17

Family
ID=10588202
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Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date

AU65111/86A
Ceased

AU596816B2
(en)

1985-11-14
1986-11-13
Resistance welding of aluminium

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US
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US4972047A
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EP
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EP0226317B1
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JP
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JPH084945B2
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KR
(1)

KR870004776A
(en)

CN
(1)

CN1007327B
(en)

AU
(1)

AU596816B2
(en)

BR
(1)

BR8605609A
(en)

CA
(1)

CA1266513A
(en)

DE
(1)

DE3676796D1
(en)

ES
(1)

ES2020188B3
(en)

GB
(1)

GB8528049D0
(en)

IN
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IN173081B
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MY101057A
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ファナック株式会社
Control device, electrode polishing method, and electrode polishing system

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(en)

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1975-09-15
1979-10-17

Reynolds Metals Co

Resistance welding electrode

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Metal pretreatment for resistance spot welding of aluminum

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DE
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patent/DE3676796D1/en
not_active
Expired – Fee Related

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EP
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patent/EP0226317B1/en
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Expired – Lifetime

1986-11-04
ES
ES86308582T
patent/ES2020188B3/en
not_active
Expired – Lifetime

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IN
IN979DE1986
patent/IN173081B/en
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BR
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CA
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AU
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patent/AU596816B2/en
not_active
Ceased

1986-11-14
KR
KR860009608A
patent/KR870004776A/en
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1986-11-14
JP
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patent/JPH084945B2/en
not_active
Expired – Fee Related

1986-11-14
CN
CN86107783A
patent/CN1007327B/en
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MY
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US
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patent/US4972047A/en
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Priority date
Publication date
Assignee
Title

GB1554297A
(en)

*

1975-09-15
1979-10-17
Reynolds Metals Co
Resistance welding electrode

GB2139540A
(en)

*

1983-05-07
1984-11-14
Bl Tech Ltd
Structures fabricated from aluminium components and processes involved in making these structures

US4546229A
(en)

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1984-02-15
1985-10-08
Alcan International Limited
Metal pretreatment for resistance spot welding of aluminum

Also Published As

Publication number
Publication date

IN173081B
(en)

1994-02-05

GB8528049D0
(en)

1985-12-18

ES2020188B3
(en)

1991-08-01

KR870004776A
(en)

1987-06-01

BR8605609A
(en)

1987-08-18

EP0226317A1
(en)

1987-06-24

CA1266513A
(en)

1990-03-06

DE3676796D1
(en)

1991-02-14

CN86107783A
(en)

1987-05-27

JPH084945B2
(en)

1996-01-24

MY101057A
(en)

1991-07-16

JPS62156085A
(en)

1987-07-11

CN1007327B
(en)

1990-03-28

US4972047A
(en)

1990-11-20

EP0226317B1
(en)

1991-01-09

AU6511186A
(en)

1987-05-21

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