Gregori12... REF Your photos of installed fasteners.
I believe You need to get your hands on a copy of Permanent Fasteners for Light-Weight Structures - K Hoffer (Breman, 1984). This 'little blue-book' is the BEST book I ever found on the subject of installed fasteners. Not sure where I got my copy... but I'll never let it go. And yes, I scanned/*.pdf'ed/OCR'ed it for my use and for limited distribution here at work.
This book contains virtually every fastener type I've ever worked with, INSTALLED. There is a graphical view [tech illustration] of each fastener as it 'should appear installed'... and then there is a photo of a representative fastener 'properly installed' in a 2-sheet assembly. The key [beauty] to these photos of the installed fastener is that each installation is very carefully sectioned [cut] thru the mid-point axis of the to show what it looks like in a 'real-world' installation. The photo reveals 'dirty little secrets' such as gaps/voids, miss-matches/fits, irregular deformations, tail shapes/sizes, etc [the reason we must be careful with every element of fastener installations].
NOTE. One afternoon a new/green engineer, unfamiliar with rivet installations, was called to the shop floor to examine blind rivets in a panel assembly that were "improperly installed by the vendor", IE: they looked very different from the solid driven rivets everyone was used to seeing. Since these blind rivets were authorized substitutes, this raised a big red-flag. The engineer was getting worked-up and hot under the collar about poor blind rivet quality... especially the lack of a 'bulbed tail'. I asked what blind was used: NAS1398B5s blind rivets were installed ILO MS20470AD5 solid rivets. I pulled this blue-book out and showed him both rivets as they 'were supposed-to-be installed'. The NAS1398s in the panel assy matched the the photos from the book... and the 'red flag' was lowered immediately. However, the solid rivets looked much sturdier... so I showed him alternative 'bulbed cherry-max blind rivets' that I personally would prefer be installed this assembly. Simply put, the bulbed cherry-max rivets help pull sheets together and also had a substantial bulbed tail for tension resistance [which the 1398s do not have]... and have a options for nominal [NAS9301] and 1st oversize [0.0162" OS NAS9304 for repair]. Since the 1398 only comes with a nominal dia shank, and it has a tiny bulbed tail, it is more-difficult to install by-the-book. MOTE: there is a 1/64" OS's version of the 1398 for repair but that version is special order from Cherry...NO NAS number equiv... and are very hard to get in a timely manner. NOTE: Guess what I normally specify instead on the OS version of the 1398???... NAS9304!
Regards, Wil Taylor
o Trust - But Verify!
o We believe to be true what we prefer to be true.
o For those who believe, no proof is required; for those who cannot believe, no proof is possible.
o Unfortunately, in science what You 'believe' is irrelevant. ["Orion"]
o Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist. [Picasso]