daven123
Mechanical
- May 5, 2014
- 3
Hi. I am reviewing the stresses on a cantilevered axle with threaded shaft as shown in the first attachment, including comparing to formulas used for bolts. Not including pretension there is a bending moment in the axle due to horizontal forces keeping the axle in position. Is the bending moment nullified by the pretension? Reviewing how pretension works in bolts it appears that there is no added load on the axle due to the F.x force unless/until the F.x force would exceed the pretension force (causing separation). If that is true there would be no moment on the axle since the pretension forces are symmetric about the axle shoulder (bolt head) and about the axle nut. Specification for Structural Joints has a few sentences about limiting prying on bolts, but does not define prying. Introduction to the Design and Behavior of Bolted Joints shows prying as eccentric separation of the pieces being jointed by the bolt, but for an axle there is only a single member between the shoulder (bolt head) and nut. It appears to me that prying is different than the moment caused by these horizontal forces. Attached is also the information I found regarding pretension. Thanks for the help.