A Rivet Installation Cobot

Tool Gauge was supplying a customer with a fiberglass filled part with 10 nutplates installed. That amounted to 20 riveting operations in total. Initially, the customer planned to use 4 1/8” pop-rivets and 16 3/32” pop-rivets. To our team that was undesireable:

3/32” rivets are small. They are the smallest commercially available rivets I can find in distribution, smaller than any metric rivets in case you were curious. This would not be a problem except few manufacturers supply tools capable of using 3/32” rivets.

After some investigation, we were hoping to integrate a Gesipa GAV8000 into the end of arm tool for a UR3. The discussions for this are still ongoing as of time of writing so there is still the possibility this will be used at a later date. A GAV8000 would allow our team to install all rivets in nearly 60 seconds, a significant time in that parts could be assembled in cycle with the injection molding machine. Any longer would require assembly at a later date, increasing the overhead costs and lead-time.

Implementation

Tool Gauge has access to a few fun toys, some of which were unnecessary for this project specifically, but are underutilized and lessons here could enable ambitious designs at a later date.

CAD

A Milwaukee M12 Rivet Tool was being used to manually install rivets. It was scanned using a Faro Laser Line Scanner and uploaded into CATIA.

Using the point cloud as a reference, an end of arm tool was sketched and 3D printed within a day. The tool plus a force-torque sensor was then mounted to a UR3-CB3 , with an estimated end of arm tool mass right at the threshold of 3kg for that model.

Demo

After a week of troubleshooting, assembling, and reprinting some components in need of reinforcement, a reliable process was established:

Noteworthy Conclusions/Lessons for Future Projects

There are a few takeaways that stand out in this integration. Some on the hardware/CAD side and others on the robotic programming side.