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https://www.repairerdrivennews.com/...mong-significant-high-strength-steel-content/

2018 Jeep Wrangler: Frame among significant high-strength steel content

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content great-designs-and-steel-20190515-52-768x576


The current-generation 2018 Jeep Wrangler’s body is more than 40 percent steels in high-strength or stronger grades, while the frame is nearly 80 percent high-strength or advanced-high-strength steels.

They’re among the elements that helped Jeep cut more than 112 pounds out of the popular vehicle compared to the outgoing Wrangler.

FCA in 2017 already confirmed the extensive use of aluminum on the Wrangler, but April Bagley of FCA body systems and components engineering provided a look at the vehicle’s steel last month during the 2019 Great Designs in Steel.

The Wrangler was the No. 16-selling vehicle in the country in 2018, according to Good Car Bad Car, so it behooves repairers to be ready for its structures.

Bagley noted that the OEM had to deal with an additional 32.85 pounds of functional weight, including materials to handle noise, vibration and harshness; keep passengers safe; and support the Wrangler’s 100-pound spare tire.

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content great-designs-and-steel-20190515-55-1024x768



eep cut 54.45 pounds out of the body-in-white with material design and optimization, and achieved another 80.03 pounds of lightweighting with the closures, according to Bagley. Another 11.02 pounds fell through hardtop design optimization and using “low-density SMC in places,” Bagley said.

The OEM confirmed in 2017 that the off-road vehicle used aluminum in its doors. including the half-door option on the Rubicon; hood; windshield frame; and fenders. FCA’s free repair procedures indicate the tailgate outer is aluminum, while the inner is magnesium. (Note: You need to check the paid FCA procedures to do an actual repair. It’s also unclear if the free FCA PDFs are updated consistently to reflect the content on the paid site.)

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content 018-jeep-wrangler-steel-27-e1560822966176-1024x568




Bagley said despite extensive aluminum and steel, the Wrangler didn’t actually have any aluminum-to-steel joints. She said Jeep used traditional aluminum-aluminum joining methods, such as structural adhesive and rivets, and noted the door employed six joining methodologies, ranging from crimping and hemming to spot welding.



Technically, the hood might not always be aluminum. FCA used the nonferrous metal for the high-volume Rubicon, Sport and Sahara variants, Bagley said. But she said the OEM used steel hoods for energy management purposes in global markets with pedestrian protection requirements, and noted she expected it’d appear on a buzz model at some point. (As of now, the U.S. doesn’t have pedestrian protection requirements.)

A diagram from Bagley’s presentation indicated 56.2 percent of the body-in-white is mild steel and 19.5 percent is high-strength steel.

She said the body’s 5.8 percent advanced high-strength steel included load beams and the A-pillar for small-overlap crash tests, and its 14.4 percent hot-stamped ultra-high-strength steel included the “upper cage structure.”

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content ler-steel-proportions-28-1-e1560823016579-1024x571




Looking beyond steel, 2.7 percent of the body is aluminum — the closures weren’t counted here, only the aluminum windshield frame — and the 1 percent which is plastic includes stiffening reinforcements and the cargo top, according to Bagley and her presentation. A final 0.4 percent is “Other,” according to the presentation.

The frame is only 15.2 percent mild steel.

“It’s a high-strength-steel-intensive frame” with roll-formed and stamped parts, Bagley said. 57.3 percent is high-strength steel, and 21.5 percent is advanced high-strength steel. The 3 percent aluminum includes a 6061-T6 crossmember, according to Jeep’s presentation. A final 3 percent is “Other,” according to the presentation.

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content 018-jeep-wrangler-steel-29-e1560823112526-1024x573



According to the presentation, nine tailor-rolled blanks cut 18.96 pounds.

“This helps us with eliminating reinforcements and managing our assembly of the frame efficiently,” Bagley said.

Her presentation tied those two achievements to Jeep optimizing the tailor-rolled blank thickness on the back of the Jeep frame. The slide also associated “Common Front Crush tip dies with different rolling profiles for each frame variant” with tailor-rolled blanks.

Body variants include four-door and two-door Wranglers, with multiple unique styles depending on the particular subconfiguration, according to the presentation.

However, Bagley noted that 80 percent of the parts carry over to the two-door variant, with a similiar proportion transferring to the truck variant.



Next-gen Jeep Wrangler has ‘Blow-Formed’ ultra-high-strength steel sport bars

The new generation of the Jeep Wrangler on sale now has what FCA calls “Hot Blow-Formed” sport bars running from the start of the A-pillar back to the end of the C-pillar.

April Bagley of FCA body systems and components engineering explained the technology of the structures last month during the 2019 Great Designs in Steel. The new generation of the Wrangler started with the 2018 model year, so repairers are probably already seeing them.

According to Bagley’s presentation, the sport bars are part of the 14.4 percent of the vehicle made up of hot-stamped ultra-high-strength steel.

FCA’s free OEM repair procedures indicate they’re actually two unsectionable, 1,300-megapascal structures connected at the B-pillar. (Note: You need to check the paid FCA procedures to do an actual repair. It’s also unclear if the free FCA PDFs are updated consistently to reflect the content on the paid site.)


Next-gen Jeep Wrangler has ‘Blow-Formed’ ultra-high-strength steel sport bars


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content 1632156926260-





Bagley said the tubes were formed by injecting hot air into steel within a die, blowing up the steel to the shape of the die. An injection of water then quenches the structure into the tough, light structure you receive.

The technique also allows for complex sections and dimensions, reducing residual stresses and tighter tolerances, she said, calling the latter importnat for an upper body. It also removed six bolted joints worth 26 bolts from the process, she said.

FCA sought to use the 2018 Wrangler’s sport bars to meet roof crush requirements for the first time, Bagley said. “It was a challenge,” she said.

The front sport bar remains constant. The rear sport bar’s shape differs between the two- and four-door Wrangler.

“The sport bar is our upper body,” Bagley said. “It needed to be dimensionally stable and structurally sound.”




Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content 1632156951005-





According to the Jeep repair procedures, part or all of the B-pillar (the entire structure on the two-door and the outer on the four-door) and hinge pillar reinforcement are also 1,300 MPa. These are not permitted to be sectioned as well. The B-pillar inner on the four-door Wrangler is 690 MPa and can’t be sectioned either, in case you were curious.

It’s unclear from Bagley’s presentation if the B-pillar on the two-door Wrangler variant is blow-formed.

“Due to the usage of the type of metal in conjunction with the tensile strength involved on the inner components and reinforcements sectioning of these parts are not allowed,” FCA writes of all these parts in its free repair procedures. “Complete replacement of the component or reinforcement is the only acceptable repair.

“It will be necessary to use a Tungsten Carbide Drill Bit to release the spot welds along the areas where these parts join other components.” (Emphasis FCA’s.)

Bagley also said the blow-formed sport bars play a role in the Wrangler’s small-overlap crash protection too. The IIHS test involves ramming the driver- and passenger-side quarters of the front end into a 5-foot-tall barrier at 40 mph, simulating smacking into a tree.

Bagley called that test a “new feature for us,” possibly a reference to the prior-generation Wrangler debuting in the 2007 model year, five years before the IIHS test’s introduction. (The old Wrangler did pretty well, considering: The two-door version gets a “marginal” but the four-door Wranger gets a “good.“)

“We have an offensive structure and a defensive structure,” Bagley said.


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content great-designs-and-steel-20190515-49-1024x768-




The offensive structure is a combination of body and frame structural load paths which absorb energy and push the Wrangler off the barrier, according to Bagley. Her presentation depicted an HSLA-550 shear plate, a DP-780 hinge pillar outer and TRIP-690 hydroformed tubes containing a fiberglass-reinforced composite insert. An HSLA-340 spring seat appears on the frame rail, according to the presentation.

Defensive structures like the sport bars and other hot-stamped reinforcements and high-strength steel loadpaths provide a safety cage and prevent intrusion into the passenger cabin, according to Bagley.

Her presentation also indicated an “Upgraded Sill section for higher strength” and mentioned “State-of-the-art detailed simulation models used for spot weld and material rupture characterization.”



Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content el-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573-




For side-impacts, FCA used the “same strategy,” Bagley said.

High-strength steel underbody cross members, the sport bar, and the hot-stamped B-pillar all play a role, according to Bagley. She also pointed out that the B-pillar had a lower-strength transition and soft-zone to manage the energy. (Likely another reason why you shouldn’t section it.)

Roof crush strategies also included a high-strength steel front header and roof bows to transfer energy across the vehicle, according to the presentation.
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Dan M.

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Interesting article. Thanks for posting.
 

txj2go

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I'd like to know what strength level they consider to be standard and what strength level they consider to be high strength? It makes sense that the automotive industry is using higher strength steel in order to use less of it.

What is the most recycled material? I've read that it is steel. Steel in cars is very recycled, as well as other smaller sources of steel. Steel used in construction, reinforcing steel and steel beams, is mostly made from recycled steel which is mostly from cars. So if better steel is used in cars, then there is better steel available for use in construction of buildings.
 

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Nice article. Thanks for sharing.

I simply don't know where all the weight savings went. I did an apples to apples (same fuel, same load, same winch, similar weight tires and wheels, same bumbers, same interior with leather/Alpine, etc) and my JLUR rubicon with Artec aluminum skid plates is within 20 lbs of my JKUR with heavy Rock Hard steal skids.

If they saved 112lbs on the body it went back in somewhere. I know the brakes are a little bigger, transmission is a little lighter, engine is about the same. Where did all the weight savings go?
 

FloridaLarry

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Nice read. From that site, even more stuff:


Next-gen Jeep Wrangler has 'Blow-Formed' ultra-high-strength steel sport bars - Repairer Driven NewsRepairer Driven News

Next-gen Jeep Wrangler has ‘Blow-Formed’ ultra-high-strength steel sport bars


The new generation of the Jeep Wrangler on sale now has what FCA calls “Hot Blow-Formed” sport bars running from the start of the A-pillar back to the end of the C-pillar.

April Bagley of FCA body systems and components engineering explained the technology of the structures last month during the 2019 Great Designs in Steel. The new generation of the Wrangler started with the 2018 model year, so repairers are probably already seeing them.

According to Bagley’s presentation, the sport bars are part of the 14.4 percent of the vehicle made up of hot-stamped ultra-high-strength steel.

FCA’s free OEM repair procedures indicate they’re actually two unsectionable, 1,300-megapascal structures connected at the B-pillar. (Note: You need to check the paid FCA procedures to do an actual repair. It’s also unclear if the free FCA PDFs are updated consistently to reflect the content on the paid site.)


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content 1632156926260




Bagley said the tubes were formed by injecting hot air into steel within a die, blowing up the steel to the shape of the die. An injection of water then quenches the structure into the tough, light structure you receive.

The technique also allows for complex sections and dimensions, reducing residual stresses and tighter tolerances, she said, calling the latter importnat for an upper body. It also removed six bolted joints worth 26 bolts from the process, she said.

FCA sought to use the 2018 Wrangler’s sport bars to meet roof crush requirements for the first time, Bagley said. “It was a challenge,” she said.

The front sport bar remains constant. The rear sport bar’s shape differs between the two- and four-door Wrangler.

“The sport bar is our upper body,” Bagley said. “It needed to be dimensionally stable and structurally sound.”


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content 1632156951005




According to the Jeep repair procedures, part or all of the B-pillar (the entire structure on the two-door and the outer on the four-door) and hinge pillar reinforcement are also 1,300 MPa. These are not permitted to be sectioned as well. The B-pillar inner on the four-door Wrangler is 690 MPa and can’t be sectioned either, in case you were curious.

It’s unclear from Bagley’s presentation if the B-pillar on the two-door Wrangler variant is blow-formed.

“Due to the usage of the type of metal in conjunction with the tensile strength involved on the inner components and reinforcements sectioning of these parts are not allowed,” FCA writes of all these parts in its free repair procedures. “Complete replacement of the component or reinforcement is the only acceptable repair.

“It will be necessary to use a Tungsten Carbide Drill Bit to release the spot welds along the areas where these parts join other components.” (Emphasis FCA’s.)

Bagley also said the blow-formed sport bars play a role in the Wrangler’s small-overlap crash protection too. The IIHS test involves ramming the driver- and passenger-side quarters of the front end into a 5-foot-tall barrier at 40 mph, simulating smacking into a tree.

Bagley called that test a “new feature for us,” possibly a reference to the prior-generation Wrangler debuting in the 2007 model year, five years before the IIHS test’s introduction. (The old Wrangler did pretty well, considering: The two-door version gets a “marginal” but the four-door Wranger gets a “good.“)

“We have an offensive structure and a defensive structure,” Bagley said.

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content great-designs-and-steel-20190515-49-1024x768



The offensive structure is a combination of body and frame structural load paths which absorb energy and push the Wrangler off the barrier, according to Bagley. Her presentation depicted an HSLA-550 shear plate, a DP-780 hinge pillar outer and TRIP-690 hydroformed tubes containing a fiberglass-reinforced composite insert. An HSLA-340 spring seat appears on the frame rail, according to the presentation.

Defensive structures like the sport bars and other hot-stamped reinforcements and high-strength steel loadpaths provide a safety cage and prevent intrusion into the passenger cabin, according to Bagley.

Her presentation also indicated an “Upgraded Sill section for higher strength” and mentioned “State-of-the-art detailed simulation models used for spot weld and material rupture characterization.”


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573



For side-impacts, FCA used the “same strategy,” Bagley said.

High-strength steel underbody cross members, the sport bar, and the hot-stamped B-pillar all play a role, according to Bagley. She also pointed out that the B-pillar had a lower-strength transition and soft-zone to manage the energy. (Likely another reason why you shouldn’t section it.)

Roof crush strategies also included a high-strength steel front header and roof bows to transfer energy across the vehicle, according to the presentation.
 
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"I'd like to know what strength level they consider to be standard and what strength level they consider to be high strength?"

It depends on who you talk to, but generally in the industry steel strength is classified by the following categories,
High Strength Steel (HSS) is anything above 280 MPa yield strength.
Ultra High Strength Steel (UHSS) and Advanced High Strength Steel (AHSS) are generally 600 MPa yield or more.
To put that into perspective, "normal" mild Steel grades are around 200 to 250 MPa yield.

Having worked for the past 35 years, almost exclusively with HSS grades and above making chassis components, I find the information in the presentation totally unremarkable. Every automaker has constructed vehicles this way for years now, selecting materials to give a weight saving, cost saving, improved strength or improved crash performance.

Yes, with modern vehicles you can't just cut them up and weld them back together again. There can be many complications, particularly with aluminium or hot formed steel.
 
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txj2go

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High Strength Steel (HSS) is anything above 280 MPa yield strength.
Ultra High Strength Steel (UHSS) and Advanced High Strength Steel (AHSS) are generally 600 MPa yield or more.
To put that into perspective, "normal" mild Steel grades are around 200 to 250 MPa yield.
(I'm a structural engineer, in our terminology HSS means "Hollow Structural Section", meaning a square or rectangular tube or some types of pipe.)
I convert to units I can better relate to-
250MPa=36ksi, which is pretty mild steel
The majority of the structural material that we get from recycled automobiles is 345-415MPa. The US is now using some Grade 80 and Grade 100 reinforcing steel, grade 80 would be just above 560MPa for comparison.
I've seen truck frames that were higher strength heat treated steel, with warnings not to drill into them (which would introduce problems with fatigue and fracture), or weld to them (which would introduce problems with fatigue, fracture, as well as harm the heat treatment and reduce the strength).
 

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Interesting, I always thought the body was aluminum. Well that's good to know! Pretty neat seeing the info on the structure. Thanks!
 

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Nice article. Thanks for sharing.

I simply don't know where all the weight savings went. I did an apples to apples (same fuel, same load, same winch, similar weight tires and wheels, same bumbers, same interior with leather/Alpine, etc) and my JLUR rubicon with Artec aluminum skid plates is within 20 lbs of my JKUR with heavy Rock Hard steal skids.

If they saved 112lbs on the body it went back in somewhere. I know the brakes are a little bigger, transmission is a little lighter, engine is about the same. Where did all the weight savings go?
In their wallet!!
 

m3reno

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Interesting, I always thought the body was aluminum. Well that's good to know! Pretty neat seeing the info on the structure. Thanks!
Aluminum is garbage! I had a dirt bike carrier that was 1/4 thick aluminum square tubing. After a year it snapped right off at the lowest point from fatigue. I wouldn't trust it for a framing material, but hood maybe, if they can get the paint to stop oxidizing
 

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Let me start out with this, my 2015 JKU was totaled, when people saw the accident, they said, Wow that Jeep really held up well, I think I'll buy one.
Great article, feel more confident in my 2019 JLU.
 

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https://www.repairerdrivennews.com/...mong-significant-high-strength-steel-content/

2018 Jeep Wrangler: Frame among significant high-strength steel content

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573


The current-generation 2018 Jeep Wrangler’s body is more than 40 percent steels in high-strength or stronger grades, while the frame is nearly 80 percent high-strength or advanced-high-strength steels.

They’re among the elements that helped Jeep cut more than 112 pounds out of the popular vehicle compared to the outgoing Wrangler.

FCA in 2017 already confirmed the extensive use of aluminum on the Wrangler, but April Bagley of FCA body systems and components engineering provided a look at the vehicle’s steel last month during the 2019 Great Designs in Steel.

The Wrangler was the No. 16-selling vehicle in the country in 2018, according to Good Car Bad Car, so it behooves repairers to be ready for its structures.

Bagley noted that the OEM had to deal with an additional 32.85 pounds of functional weight, including materials to handle noise, vibration and harshness; keep passengers safe; and support the Wrangler’s 100-pound spare tire.

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573



eep cut 54.45 pounds out of the body-in-white with material design and optimization, and achieved another 80.03 pounds of lightweighting with the closures, according to Bagley. Another 11.02 pounds fell through hardtop design optimization and using “low-density SMC in places,” Bagley said.

The OEM confirmed in 2017 that the off-road vehicle used aluminum in its doors. including the half-door option on the Rubicon; hood; windshield frame; and fenders. FCA’s free repair procedures indicate the tailgate outer is aluminum, while the inner is magnesium. (Note: You need to check the paid FCA procedures to do an actual repair. It’s also unclear if the free FCA PDFs are updated consistently to reflect the content on the paid site.)

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573




Bagley said despite extensive aluminum and steel, the Wrangler didn’t actually have any aluminum-to-steel joints. She said Jeep used traditional aluminum-aluminum joining methods, such as structural adhesive and rivets, and noted the door employed six joining methodologies, ranging from crimping and hemming to spot welding.



Technically, the hood might not always be aluminum. FCA used the nonferrous metal for the high-volume Rubicon, Sport and Sahara variants, Bagley said. But she said the OEM used steel hoods for energy management purposes in global markets with pedestrian protection requirements, and noted she expected it’d appear on a buzz model at some point. (As of now, the U.S. doesn’t have pedestrian protection requirements.)

A diagram from Bagley’s presentation indicated 56.2 percent of the body-in-white is mild steel and 19.5 percent is high-strength steel.

She said the body’s 5.8 percent advanced high-strength steel included load beams and the A-pillar for small-overlap crash tests, and its 14.4 percent hot-stamped ultra-high-strength steel included the “upper cage structure.”

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573




Looking beyond steel, 2.7 percent of the body is aluminum — the closures weren’t counted here, only the aluminum windshield frame — and the 1 percent which is plastic includes stiffening reinforcements and the cargo top, according to Bagley and her presentation. A final 0.4 percent is “Other,” according to the presentation.

The frame is only 15.2 percent mild steel.

“It’s a high-strength-steel-intensive frame” with roll-formed and stamped parts, Bagley said. 57.3 percent is high-strength steel, and 21.5 percent is advanced high-strength steel. The 3 percent aluminum includes a 6061-T6 crossmember, according to Jeep’s presentation. A final 3 percent is “Other,” according to the presentation.

Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573



According to the presentation, nine tailor-rolled blanks cut 18.96 pounds.

“This helps us with eliminating reinforcements and managing our assembly of the frame efficiently,” Bagley said.

Her presentation tied those two achievements to Jeep optimizing the tailor-rolled blank thickness on the back of the Jeep frame. The slide also associated “Common Front Crush tip dies with different rolling profiles for each frame variant” with tailor-rolled blanks.

Body variants include four-door and two-door Wranglers, with multiple unique styles depending on the particular subconfiguration, according to the presentation.

However, Bagley noted that 80 percent of the parts carry over to the two-door variant, with a similiar proportion transferring to the truck variant.



Next-gen Jeep Wrangler has ‘Blow-Formed’ ultra-high-strength steel sport bars

The new generation of the Jeep Wrangler on sale now has what FCA calls “Hot Blow-Formed” sport bars running from the start of the A-pillar back to the end of the C-pillar.

April Bagley of FCA body systems and components engineering explained the technology of the structures last month during the 2019 Great Designs in Steel. The new generation of the Wrangler started with the 2018 model year, so repairers are probably already seeing them.

According to Bagley’s presentation, the sport bars are part of the 14.4 percent of the vehicle made up of hot-stamped ultra-high-strength steel.

FCA’s free OEM repair procedures indicate they’re actually two unsectionable, 1,300-megapascal structures connected at the B-pillar. (Note: You need to check the paid FCA procedures to do an actual repair. It’s also unclear if the free FCA PDFs are updated consistently to reflect the content on the paid site.)


Next-gen Jeep Wrangler has ‘Blow-Formed’ ultra-high-strength steel sport bars


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573





Bagley said the tubes were formed by injecting hot air into steel within a die, blowing up the steel to the shape of the die. An injection of water then quenches the structure into the tough, light structure you receive.

The technique also allows for complex sections and dimensions, reducing residual stresses and tighter tolerances, she said, calling the latter importnat for an upper body. It also removed six bolted joints worth 26 bolts from the process, she said.

FCA sought to use the 2018 Wrangler’s sport bars to meet roof crush requirements for the first time, Bagley said. “It was a challenge,” she said.

The front sport bar remains constant. The rear sport bar’s shape differs between the two- and four-door Wrangler.

“The sport bar is our upper body,” Bagley said. “It needed to be dimensionally stable and structurally sound.”




Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573





According to the Jeep repair procedures, part or all of the B-pillar (the entire structure on the two-door and the outer on the four-door) and hinge pillar reinforcement are also 1,300 MPa. These are not permitted to be sectioned as well. The B-pillar inner on the four-door Wrangler is 690 MPa and can’t be sectioned either, in case you were curious.

It’s unclear from Bagley’s presentation if the B-pillar on the two-door Wrangler variant is blow-formed.

“Due to the usage of the type of metal in conjunction with the tensile strength involved on the inner components and reinforcements sectioning of these parts are not allowed,” FCA writes of all these parts in its free repair procedures. “Complete replacement of the component or reinforcement is the only acceptable repair.

“It will be necessary to use a Tungsten Carbide Drill Bit to release the spot welds along the areas where these parts join other components.” (Emphasis FCA’s.)

Bagley also said the blow-formed sport bars play a role in the Wrangler’s small-overlap crash protection too. The IIHS test involves ramming the driver- and passenger-side quarters of the front end into a 5-foot-tall barrier at 40 mph, simulating smacking into a tree.

Bagley called that test a “new feature for us,” possibly a reference to the prior-generation Wrangler debuting in the 2007 model year, five years before the IIHS test’s introduction. (The old Wrangler did pretty well, considering: The two-door version gets a “marginal” but the four-door Wranger gets a “good.“)

“We have an offensive structure and a defensive structure,” Bagley said.


Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573




The offensive structure is a combination of body and frame structural load paths which absorb energy and push the Wrangler off the barrier, according to Bagley. Her presentation depicted an HSLA-550 shear plate, a DP-780 hinge pillar outer and TRIP-690 hydroformed tubes containing a fiberglass-reinforced composite insert. An HSLA-340 spring seat appears on the frame rail, according to the presentation.

Defensive structures like the sport bars and other hot-stamped reinforcements and high-strength steel loadpaths provide a safety cage and prevent intrusion into the passenger cabin, according to Bagley.

Her presentation also indicated an “Upgraded Sill section for higher strength” and mentioned “State-of-the-art detailed simulation models used for spot weld and material rupture characterization.”



Jeep Wrangler JL Good reading on JL construction: Frame and Sport Roll Bars among significant high-strength steel content -steel-front-structures-31-e1560466288291-1024x573




For side-impacts, FCA used the “same strategy,” Bagley said.

High-strength steel underbody cross members, the sport bar, and the hot-stamped B-pillar all play a role, according to Bagley. She also pointed out that the B-pillar had a lower-strength transition and soft-zone to manage the energy. (Likely another reason why you shouldn’t section it.)

Roof crush strategies also included a high-strength steel front header and roof bows to transfer energy across the vehicle, according to the presentation.
Very interesting, But it is amazing to me that engineering can be so sophisticated yet they can't seem to be able to keep some parts of the frame from rusting or corroding. :(
 

legacy_etu

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They said no aluminum to steel joints. Hmmm, I'm not going to argue semantics about what constitutes a joint, but to me the steel screws attaching the doors to the hinges are a steel to aluminum joining method ...............and very problematic.
 
 



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