StaticFish
Mechanical
- Mar 5, 2003
- 10
Hi
I'm currently in a debate with a co-worker about the hardness of nuts in bolts. I was taught (and found the reference in my old machine design textbook) that nuts should be made from a softer material for a number of reasons:
First to yield - maintaining integrity of bolt
First to yield/compress - first threads deflect, transferring some of the load to the following threads, more evenly distributing forces through each, smaller chance of stripping/crushing threads
His side of the story is that you want the bolt to fail first, but doesn't really back up his reasoning.
If a bolt is softer when it is pretensioned, the bolt threads furthest from the end will begin to deflect and the nut loses contact with the bolt. A much greater force is transferred to the remaining threads in the bolt, which inturn deflect and it is a domino effect.
Any insight would be very helpful.
SF
~~Bold are the ones who come over the line to fall~~
I'm currently in a debate with a co-worker about the hardness of nuts in bolts. I was taught (and found the reference in my old machine design textbook) that nuts should be made from a softer material for a number of reasons:
First to yield - maintaining integrity of bolt
First to yield/compress - first threads deflect, transferring some of the load to the following threads, more evenly distributing forces through each, smaller chance of stripping/crushing threads
His side of the story is that you want the bolt to fail first, but doesn't really back up his reasoning.
If a bolt is softer when it is pretensioned, the bolt threads furthest from the end will begin to deflect and the nut loses contact with the bolt. A much greater force is transferred to the remaining threads in the bolt, which inturn deflect and it is a domino effect.
Any insight would be very helpful.
SF
~~Bold are the ones who come over the line to fall~~