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Toggle anchor strength

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charliemachine

Mechanical
Feb 19, 2020
1
Hi folks I have a problem that I'm second guessing myself on too much for something that's probably very simple. I have to fasten dozens of counterbored 30mm square aluminum extrusion, each about 30" long, to a wall which is a sandwich of plywood and drwyall (long story). I'm planning to fasten them with "snap toggle" anchors, which means the 1/4-20 bolt will be 3.5" long. I will be putting about 70lb onto the top of the extrusion, 3/4" off the wall. My question is, if I'm concerned about the bolt strength do I treat this as a shear problem with a derated capacity (and if so, derated how much?), or as a simple force on a cantilever beam problem? That doesn't seem right because the threaded toggle isn't firmly fixed in place. Alternatively, is there a much more suitable fastening method for this kind of situation? Thanks!
 
 https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=275c1bcd-51fe-43ca-abac-2f27c5c1cda4&file=wall.png
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If friction does not allow slip, your only concern is bolt tension. If the load slips, then your concern is bolt tension and shear.

Ted
 
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