jhamil1
Mechanical
- Oct 28, 2008
- 18
All,
I have a heavy hex nut approximately 3 inches in size which was threaded onto a 1.75" diameter coarse thread stud; Grade B steel. It is about 5" long. The nut failed under a pre-stress of 40,000 psi. Due to dirt or some other means the nut also experienced some torque applied by the stud up to a maximum of 2500 ft-lbs. The nut failed due to shear/fracture. My question is;
Is there a way to analytically determine the combined effects of these loads on the shear stress?
I have found combined load examples for torsion-bending but not torsion-axial.
I have a heavy hex nut approximately 3 inches in size which was threaded onto a 1.75" diameter coarse thread stud; Grade B steel. It is about 5" long. The nut failed under a pre-stress of 40,000 psi. Due to dirt or some other means the nut also experienced some torque applied by the stud up to a maximum of 2500 ft-lbs. The nut failed due to shear/fracture. My question is;
Is there a way to analytically determine the combined effects of these loads on the shear stress?
I have found combined load examples for torsion-bending but not torsion-axial.