toes112
Mechanical
- May 23, 2006
- 9
I have not been able to find much information regarding torque values applied to jam nuts, so hopefully this discussion will share useful knowledge.
Situation: I have two pieces of material that rotate about each other via a shoulder bolt. The shoulder bolt gets torqued to 55 ft-lbs into part "A", and part "B" rotates on the shaft of the shoulder bolt. The current design has a jam nut applied to the back end of part "A" to prevent backing out.
The orientation of components is:
Jam Nut--Part "A"--Bearing--Part "B"--Shoulder Bolt
Currently the jam nut is also torqued to 55-ft-lbs as well, but we are failing the threads inside the jam nut 40% of the time.
Should the jam nut be torqued to a percentage of full load? If so, how is this calculated?
Note: A jam nut is being used as opposed to a standard nut due to clearance issues.
Situation: I have two pieces of material that rotate about each other via a shoulder bolt. The shoulder bolt gets torqued to 55 ft-lbs into part "A", and part "B" rotates on the shaft of the shoulder bolt. The current design has a jam nut applied to the back end of part "A" to prevent backing out.
The orientation of components is:
Jam Nut--Part "A"--Bearing--Part "B"--Shoulder Bolt
Currently the jam nut is also torqued to 55-ft-lbs as well, but we are failing the threads inside the jam nut 40% of the time.
Should the jam nut be torqued to a percentage of full load? If so, how is this calculated?
Note: A jam nut is being used as opposed to a standard nut due to clearance issues.