OK so heres the story.
The engine in question has been built especially for the ultralight/microlight/Light sport aircraft category.
The flywheel has come loose on several aircraft cause instant engine failure as the magneto magnets are also attached to the back of the flywheel. The manufacture has continually denied there is a problem. In New Zealand we have had one engine have two engine out after having the bolts replaced each time, the pilot is not best pleased. The engine was inspected before the third outage happened and it was found to have broken bolts. Subsequently more engines of the same type were inspected and it was discovered that some of them also had broken bolts. The NZ CAA are going to bring out an AD requiring all of these engine types to have the bolts replaced every 100 hours.
An independent engineer has done work on ten of these engines, the work includes drilling the holes deeper into the end of the crank and tapping leaving an untapped length of 10mm to the surface, in other words a far side tapped hole. The fitting of 3 x 1/4inch dowels into the crank and flywheel ( the manufacture does this as well since feb this year). The fitting of new 5/16th high strength (12.9 equivalent) socket cap screws with molybdenum grease in the thread and under the head and tightening to 41Nm or 30ft/lbs. The grip length is 3/4inch with out the far side tapped holes and approximately 1 inch with. There are six of these bolts.
I have checked the torque figure using the formula in MIL-HDBK-60 available from
and come up with a figure of 42Nm based on a proof load of 140600psi (90%ys) a turn of the nut of 47deg and an elongation of 0.0055inch.
The manufacture has specified a torque of only 24Nm 18ft/lbs and the use of loctite 620 and no grease.
So something is definitely wrong in the state of Denmark and I have been trying to get to the bottom of it.
The bolts are breaking because they are loose, there can be no question about that. The dowels may help but if the bolts are only halve tight then they only delay the inevitable.
12.9 bolts are incapable of taking any type of cyclic loading, they will fracture and break.
I can't help but think that the whole problem has come from the fact that the bolts have been specified to be halve tight, reducing the preload clamp force. But as the manufacture has also specified loctite I have been attempting to see how this would affect the torquing process.
As regards repetitive torquing, there are six bolts. There is no question of tightening and loosening and then re tightening, 12.9 bolts should be thrown away once they have been taken to max preload and then released.
I must also admit that with a turn of the nut of only 47deg the use of lockwire does not inspire confidence, but in combination maybe it does.
Anyway its a badly designed joint but with a bit of effort it may be possible to improve it.
Regards
Anton