adrag
Mechanical
- Aug 4, 2008
- 34
I have a situation where I need to calculate the stress on a rod bolt. I have a 3/8-24 rod bolt which is torqued to achieve a bolt elongation of .006" as measured with a bolt stretch gauge. I have calculated the inertial load at the max rpm and I want to add that to the clamp load to get total load and then stress on the bolt. I’m using the equation:
dl = (F*L)/(E*A)
rearranged to
F=(dl*E*A)/L
My question is what number should I use for L? Should it be distance from under the bolt head to the first thread? To the middle of the threads? To the parting line of the rod cap? It makes a significant difference in the final stress.
For A, I’m using the smallest cross section of the bolt which occurs in the shank. I attached a jpeg with a cross section of the bolted joint. This should be a fairly simply calculation but this one detail is tripping me up. Thanks in advance.
dl = (F*L)/(E*A)
rearranged to
F=(dl*E*A)/L
My question is what number should I use for L? Should it be distance from under the bolt head to the first thread? To the middle of the threads? To the parting line of the rod cap? It makes a significant difference in the final stress.
For A, I’m using the smallest cross section of the bolt which occurs in the shank. I attached a jpeg with a cross section of the bolted joint. This should be a fairly simply calculation but this one detail is tripping me up. Thanks in advance.