Hi RCMRon
Well if your torque procedures are inadquate then obviously they need sorting out pretty quickly.
Now I don't know how accurate I am going to be, but if I take the 70lbs and use that as a mass in kg and convert the radius to metres I can estimate the centrifugal force by this formula:-
F=m*w^2*r = 31.8kg * 75.4^2 r/s * 1.016m = 183.681kN
if each stud takes an equal load then each one takes:-
183.681kN/20= 9.184kN tensile load
The big assumptions here are the 70lbs acts at a 40" radius
and that each stud takes an equal load.
Now in addition to the tensile load the studs also see a side load (shear) due to thermal growth in the length of the liner, which without any freedom to grow will try to shear the bolts, we could estimate the shear force but we would need the original length of liner, material and coeff of linear expansion.
Finally the material strength at 200 degrees centigrade of both the studs nuts and liners will be reduced when compared to that at room temperature which may also contribute to the failure.
Another important factor is how the fan heats up, even with materials that expand at the same rate, unless uniformly heated, then stresses can develop through differential thermal expansion.
So even if you have a weld failure then you need to explore why, is it a defect in the welding procedures? or is it the external forces causing the weld to fail.
Why not send the studs to a lab for analysis and see what they come up with.
desertfox