2013 Ford Fusion  B-pillar and A-pillar roof rail (shown in blue) laid bare on a display  buck. The orange stampings are DP780 coated advanced high-strength steel  formed using a transfer die process. The green component behind the  vertical tubes are in HSLA, CR300/340LA. (Lindsay Brooke)
Ford’s 2013 Fusion uses hydroformed steel  tubes for its B-pillars, an application that Ford body engineers claim  is a production world’s first for hydroformed components. The car also  features a hydroformed A-pillar roof rail.
Using hydroforming instead of  hot-stamped welded sheet to create the car’s roof-pillar structure  reduced mass, saved cost, reduced the bill of material, and helped  improve the new Fusion’s crash performance, said Shawn Morgans, Ford’s  Technical Leader and Global Core Manager, Body Structure, Closures, and  Body CAE.
“The benefits we’re getting from using a  closed continuous section, including giving us better structural  continuity throughout the pillars, are driving big improvements to our  body structures,” Morgans told AEI. He said in developing the  Fusion pillars, his team uncovered no other similar production  applications featuring hydroformed tubes.
Ford is driving increased use of  hydroformed components across its global body structures going forward,  Morgans said. The new C/D-segment Fusion sedan is built on Ford’s new  CD4 architecture developed by Ford Europe. It replaces the  seven-year-old Mazda G-derived CD3 platform used on the previous-generation Fusion. The CD4, which also underpins Lincoln’s  new MKZ, is a predominantly steel structure featuring a high level of  high- and ultrahigh-strength alloy content. It is claimed to be stiffer  in torsion and bending and more mass-efficient than the former platform.
Proven on F-Series programs
Morgans said the genesis of the Fusion pillar designs came in 2003, during development of a new front end for the F-250 pickup.
“In that first go-around we took our  front structure from 18 stampings down to 9 components, including the  hydroforms,” he recalled. “We also had a big reduction in spot welds,  and we found that we could reduce the mass significantly—the first  design was about 42 kg and by the third generation, which ended up on  the F-150, we were down to about 26 kg.
“Based on that work, we realized there  are huge benefits in using hydroform, so we started to push the  envelope,” he said. A hydroformed A-pillar roof rail for the P415  program (2009 F-150) followed, again bringing significant mass savings  with lower variable cost.
At the time, Ford had separate Truck and  Car engineering groups. Since the groups were combined under one  vehicle-engineering organization, the hydroforming “book of knowledge”  has been shared across the body-on-frame and unibody teams. Morgans’  boss, Chief Engineer Bruno Bartholemew, has been pushing the teams  to advance the technology.
“Bruno’s a very thorough engineer who  understands that closed sections and continuous structures are much  better than what we were getting by welding a bunch of sheet-metal  stampings together,” Morgans explained. The next major hydroform  application—the 2011 Explorer front rail—enabled a 5-kg (11-lb)  weight-save on that vehicle.
On the Fusion program, the initial  direction was to take the F-Series design for the A-pillar roof rail and  get it into a unibody. Compared with the truck application, the sedan’s  design is slightly modified because the load requirements are different  than what the truck sees due to its separate frame. Still, much effort  went into it, and the team was able to pull 4 kg (8.8 lb) out per  vehicle using hydroform, compared with a hot-stamped design.
“We replaced two hot stampings and some  other high-strength stampings, with the two hydroformed tubes in DP1000.  This enabled the mass reduction as well as a significant cost save,”  Morgans said. The concept was brought forward by a colleague who  developed it working nights at home. “He brought it in and sold us all  on the benefits,” Morgans noted.
The hydroformed parts are supplied by Cosma International, an operating unit of Magna International, for North American production.
The hydroformed B-pillar enabled Ford to  improve the Fusion’s side-impact performance significantly over the  hot-stamped design that was originally intended for the vehicle, Morgans  said. The tubes give much less deformation and overall better control  over the deformation—which helped improve the car’s roof-strength  numbers as well.
“If you meet the IIHS [Insurance Institute of Highway Safety] side-impact requirement, the 4X  roof crush test is very, very close. It didn’t take a whole lot more to  get up to the 4X,” Morgans said. In the test procedure, a metal plate  is pushed against one side of the vehicle’s roof panel at a constant  speed. The roof must withstand a force of four times the vehicle's  weight before reaching 5 in (127 mm) of crush.
“Tubular structures definitely help  here,” he asserted. “We maximized the sectional values within the  package space we’re given. When you eliminate the weld flanges you get  more usable structure out of the components, as well as greater  continuity—without the weld joints between the A-pillar and the roof  rail. Typically that’s four parts coming together so you get those  joints staggered around. And depending on how the vehicle’s built, you  don’t always get the ideal connection between those two.”
He explained that because the hydroform  tube runs all the way through, there is no discontinuity in the  structure. It’s a much better load path.
Laser welding = better joints
The ability to combine parts and moving away  from the hot stamping process brought “significant cost benefits,”  Morgans said. Hot stamping is time-consuming due to the time it takes to  heat up the blanks as well as post-treatment of the  parts including using a laser to trim edges. “We were able to get rid of  that with the hydroforming,” he said.
Ford has moved to some single-side  joining operations in its assembly plant body shops. For the hydroforms,  the company is using some stamped brackets to make the transition from  the stampings to the hydroform tube.
“Typically on the F-Series we would  MIG-weld those on to the tube and then use that stamping as the  interface to the other stampings in the structure that allow us to use  spot-welds within the plant,” Morgans explained. “For the Fusion, we  took a step forward—all the brackets have been laser-welded on, and the  brackets we’re using are primarily for tube-to-tube connections. They’re  all laser welded and they’re giving us better joints. That’s allowed us  to eliminate a number of the holes that would have needed to be there.
“And the process allows more welds within a given cycle time than is typically possible with a spot welding or MIG-weld system.”
 
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