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A self-piercing (or metal piercing) rivet is similar to a tubular
rivet except that they are produced from a stronger material and
can be heat-treated to increase piercing capability. Piercing
rivets are manufactured from a variety of grades of carbon steel,
aluminum and stainless steel materials. Rivet plating or coating
options are selected dependent on the application.
Self-piercing rivets often replace spot welding and other “button”
style clinch methods when a stronger fastened joint is required.
Self-piercing riveted joints rely on the strength of the
permanently fastened hardened rivet rather than the softer material
being fastened or a difficult to inspect weld. Successfully
clinched self pierce riveted joints are much easier to inspect
(visually) compared to spot-welded or “button” style clinch
methods. When properly installed, self pierced riveted joints will
not come apart.
Application: The rivet is driven through the top sheet of
work-piece material and the bottom sheet is then stretched or
extruded into a forming die (anvil). As the bottom sheet is
extruded into the anvil form, the tubular end of the rivet is
flared out on the forming die (fig 1), securing the sheets
together. Depending on rivet length and anvil selected, the flared
end of the rivet can be designed to pierce completely through the
sheet layers or can be flared within the bottom sheet. When
piercing leather or other soft materials, the work piece material
“slug” created when the tubular hole at the end of the rivet is
driven remains up inside the tubular end of the rivet.
A properly designed metal piercing rivet produces a strong fastened
joint. Work piece materials of standard low carbon steel, aluminum
and stainless steel typically work well for piercing, especially if
hardness of work piece material is lower than RB 50. The length of
the rivet selected and the anvil form design determines what the
final clinch will look like. In the fig 1 and 2 pictures, the rivet
and tooling was designed to have the rivet pierce through the top
layer of material but not completely through the bottom sheet.
Why use self-piercing rivets?
High-speed assembly. Rivets feed automatically in impact Rivet
Machines that cycle in approximately 3/10th of a second
No need for pre-drilled or punched work-piece holes
Does not destroy painted or coated work-piece finishes
Inexpensive perishable tooling is used
Provides strong permanent fastened joints that are easy to visually
inspect. If the rivet has pierced and clinched work-pieces, the
joint is good
If desired, the riveted joint can be air and watertight
Low cost of fastener
Easily adapted for automation