The MS Spaichingen GmbH is active in various business areas for the automotive industry. The welding technology business division has specialised in the construction of customised ultrasonic welding systems for the joining of plastic parts. However, there are also limits to ultrasonic welding. If, for example, metal and plastic are to be joined, heating contact riveting is used as an alternative. In this process developed by MS Spaichingen, only temperature is introduced into the material and a gap-free riveted joint is produced. The process also includes the accompanying measurement of the temperature at the riveting points. Each rivet punch, which is used in the MS Spaichingen systems, is therefore equipped with a thermocouple that records the temperature.
Initially, a cable from the heater manufacturer was used for the energy and signal supply. However, after around 100,000 double strokes, which corresponds to a system operating time of one year, cable ruptures occurred, which move up and down with each cycle.
The search for an alternative cable was not very easy, because special materials had to be used here. The process requires that the cable must not have a copper conductor as usual, but the same alloy as the thermocouple. This means that cables made of alloys such as a nickel/chromium-nickel compound are needed - and in large quantities, too. In addition, a flexible and dynamic cable was desired.
The igus developers first had to do basic work by looking for ways to process the comparatively hard and brittle alloys into wires. Furthermore, besides the sensor signal, the cables should also transmit energy to the sensor head. A combination of copper cables and thermocouple cables had to be chosen, whereby the comparatively soft copper cores had to be combined with the hard cores of the thermo alloys in such a way that a long service life was achieved even under dynamic stress.