blue_lateral
Computer
- Mar 22, 2019
- 7
Hi, I am John, and I am new here. I have a shear bolt question.
I am using this hardware to bolt an automotive differential ring gear on (this will not fly), I just want to get the best from the hardware. The gear is hardened steel, and the flange it bolts to is something a bit softer, probably cast or nodular iron. The loading is primarily in shear.
I bought NAS6605-14 close tolerance shear bolts, and MS21042-5 stop nuts. I intend to install one washer under the nut and torque the nut. If I have measured correctly I will have one thread below the nut and two threads out the top of the nut, sticking out. I have 2 different thickness washers (AN960-516 and AN960-516L) in case a slight adjustment is needed to prevent thread bottoming. The bolts and nuts both have UNJF threads, 3A and 3B.
This all sounds perfect to me, but I am way out of my area here.
I have been poring over pages online for the past few days. Some published by the FAA, some by race car builders who regularly use aircraft hardware, some by experimental aircraft builders, and so on. I can not find a table that addresses this particular combination. I now gather that since the nuts are tension rated, they are not normally used with shear bolts, even though they are thin enough to not run out of thread.
One table I keep running across says that MS20033 through MS20046 nuts should be torqued 100-140 inch pounds, but the bolts listed do not include NAS6605. Another column lists NAS6605 but only with thin shear nuts, and specifies 60-85 inch pounds. This is all far less than I would expect even with hardware store grade 8 bolts. Another online source suggests that 160 KSI 5/16 hardware can be torqued to 330 inch pounds. Someone in another forum claculated the tension in the bolt and also came up with 330 inch pounds. I also wonder how much I am limited by the thin heads of the NAS6605 bolts. Tables seem to address only nuts.
Another complication is that I would like to use Loctite 271. This assembly will never be disassembled. It was rivited originally, but I can't seem to get it riveted in today's world. I see the MS21042 nuts are intended to be torqued dry, and I expect Loctite to behave as a lubricant.
To summarize: NAS6605-14 bolts, MS21042-5 nuts with AN960-516 or AN960-516L washers under them, Loctite 271, Loaded in shear. Not for aircraft. Will never be disassembled. How much torque?
Thank you for any light you may be able to shed on this.
John
I am using this hardware to bolt an automotive differential ring gear on (this will not fly), I just want to get the best from the hardware. The gear is hardened steel, and the flange it bolts to is something a bit softer, probably cast or nodular iron. The loading is primarily in shear.
I bought NAS6605-14 close tolerance shear bolts, and MS21042-5 stop nuts. I intend to install one washer under the nut and torque the nut. If I have measured correctly I will have one thread below the nut and two threads out the top of the nut, sticking out. I have 2 different thickness washers (AN960-516 and AN960-516L) in case a slight adjustment is needed to prevent thread bottoming. The bolts and nuts both have UNJF threads, 3A and 3B.
This all sounds perfect to me, but I am way out of my area here.
I have been poring over pages online for the past few days. Some published by the FAA, some by race car builders who regularly use aircraft hardware, some by experimental aircraft builders, and so on. I can not find a table that addresses this particular combination. I now gather that since the nuts are tension rated, they are not normally used with shear bolts, even though they are thin enough to not run out of thread.
One table I keep running across says that MS20033 through MS20046 nuts should be torqued 100-140 inch pounds, but the bolts listed do not include NAS6605. Another column lists NAS6605 but only with thin shear nuts, and specifies 60-85 inch pounds. This is all far less than I would expect even with hardware store grade 8 bolts. Another online source suggests that 160 KSI 5/16 hardware can be torqued to 330 inch pounds. Someone in another forum claculated the tension in the bolt and also came up with 330 inch pounds. I also wonder how much I am limited by the thin heads of the NAS6605 bolts. Tables seem to address only nuts.
Another complication is that I would like to use Loctite 271. This assembly will never be disassembled. It was rivited originally, but I can't seem to get it riveted in today's world. I see the MS21042 nuts are intended to be torqued dry, and I expect Loctite to behave as a lubricant.
To summarize: NAS6605-14 bolts, MS21042-5 nuts with AN960-516 or AN960-516L washers under them, Loctite 271, Loaded in shear. Not for aircraft. Will never be disassembled. How much torque?
Thank you for any light you may be able to shed on this.
John