VitalSigns
Civil/Environmental
- May 1, 2021
- 4
Hopefully this type of question is acceptable here as it's not work related....if it's against forum rules then I apologize.
I am installing a diving board base at my home. There was an existing diving board but the old cast in place anchor bolts were rusted past mere surface rust (sections of thread had corroded away) so my plan was to drill new holes and epoxy set anchors. The base plate of the diving board base is a 1/4" thick steel square plate with four corner holes at 12" OC. The diving board manufacturer sells an epoxy kit to do exactly what I am planning but rather than buy the kit (as it had a rather hefty markup) I just separately purchased what was in the kit for less than half the cost. I purchased 6" grade B8M 1/2" SS bolt studs and Simpson Strong-Tie SetXP epoxy. I offset the new drilled holes by 5" (3" back, 2" over) from the old ones (Simpson Strong-tie lists a 3" min spacing) and epoxy set the anchors to 4" depth.
When looking at the base install instructions from the diving board manufacturers website I see that the nuts on the anchor bolts are called out to be torqued to the 40 to 50 ft-lbs range. However, Simpson Strong-Tie SetXP epoxy specs list a max torque for 1/2" anchors at 20 ft-lbs. When epoxy manufacturers give max torque specs like that are they meaning the nut tightened to the anchor bolt can't exceed 20 ft-lbs? I guess I'm a little unsure on the physics of it on when you're tightening a nut on a bolt...how much of the torque on the nut (measured with a torque wrench) is transferring to the bolt...is it 1:1 once you get snug? Or is the torque applied to the nut transferring to axial force on the bolt via the threads and if so could I apply more than 20ft-lbs of torque to the nut and still be ok with the minimum torque specs on the epoxy set anchor? Sorry if this is a question that seems silly...I'm in project management and my college engineering classes were long ago. I just don't want to over tighten and compromise the epoxy anchors.
I am installing a diving board base at my home. There was an existing diving board but the old cast in place anchor bolts were rusted past mere surface rust (sections of thread had corroded away) so my plan was to drill new holes and epoxy set anchors. The base plate of the diving board base is a 1/4" thick steel square plate with four corner holes at 12" OC. The diving board manufacturer sells an epoxy kit to do exactly what I am planning but rather than buy the kit (as it had a rather hefty markup) I just separately purchased what was in the kit for less than half the cost. I purchased 6" grade B8M 1/2" SS bolt studs and Simpson Strong-Tie SetXP epoxy. I offset the new drilled holes by 5" (3" back, 2" over) from the old ones (Simpson Strong-tie lists a 3" min spacing) and epoxy set the anchors to 4" depth.
When looking at the base install instructions from the diving board manufacturers website I see that the nuts on the anchor bolts are called out to be torqued to the 40 to 50 ft-lbs range. However, Simpson Strong-Tie SetXP epoxy specs list a max torque for 1/2" anchors at 20 ft-lbs. When epoxy manufacturers give max torque specs like that are they meaning the nut tightened to the anchor bolt can't exceed 20 ft-lbs? I guess I'm a little unsure on the physics of it on when you're tightening a nut on a bolt...how much of the torque on the nut (measured with a torque wrench) is transferring to the bolt...is it 1:1 once you get snug? Or is the torque applied to the nut transferring to axial force on the bolt via the threads and if so could I apply more than 20ft-lbs of torque to the nut and still be ok with the minimum torque specs on the epoxy set anchor? Sorry if this is a question that seems silly...I'm in project management and my college engineering classes were long ago. I just don't want to over tighten and compromise the epoxy anchors.