Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations The Obturator on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Standard for keys and keyways/keyseats design (Aircraft)

Helepolis

Mechanical
Dec 13, 2015
212
Hi all,

Is there an accepted standard (e.g. MIL, MS etc.) for designing keys and keyways/keyseats for aircraft components?
I need for designing a rectangular key with one end rounded.
Not sure if its relevant but the key material has to be stainless steel.

Google and various LLM's didn't help too much, the closest answer I got was that there isn't any particular standard for keys and ASME B17.1 is acceptable.
So I want to double check.

Thanks,
SD
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Maybe move this post to Aircraft Engineering as they could help you more with it.

From my side I'm not aware from a MIL spec for it but I'm not experienced on this.
I guess a simple requirement is to use aerospace graded stainless steel (MMPDS) to avoid issues.

Regards,
DCC
 
There's a list of specs in this thread.


Someone will soon explain why keys and keyways are evil....
 
Maybe move this post to Aircraft Engineering as they could help you more with it.
The traffic on that forum is practically dead compared to this one, so I figured bigger traffic beats a specialized forum.

Someone will soon explain why keys and keyways are evil....
Why is that? 😅
It's the first time I hear something negative against.
If they are evil, what are the "better" alternatives?
 

 
but don't double post. "report" one thread and ask for it to be deleted.

the traffic volume on the aircraft forum may be small, but I think there's quality in the replies ...
and it is only natural ... "airplanes" are a much smaller market than "mechanical eng'g".
 

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor