bradyle
Mechanical
- Apr 26, 2012
- 8
Hi,
At the moment we have a process where a spacer is screwed on to a stud (stud is through a metal sheet) and then a tray is located onto the spacer using a standard screw. However we have an issue where the tray needs to be removable and when we go to undo the screw holding the tray in place we find that the spacer unscrews from the stud as well. We have resolved this by putting glue into the stud end of the spacer but this is creating quality issues of its own so we are looking for another soloution.
One thing we are looking at is placing standoffs in the part instead of the stud + spacer, however there is an issue sourcing standoffs in the lengths we need.
I was thinking about getting a spacer where one side has a reversed thread and one standard so unscrewing one side wouldn't undo the second, however i cant seem to find any spacers that have this after my morning of searching. Does anyone know if these do exist? Is there a term i should be using in my search? Would this work as I envision?
Can anyone think of other soloutions that could be used.
Thanks for your help
At the moment we have a process where a spacer is screwed on to a stud (stud is through a metal sheet) and then a tray is located onto the spacer using a standard screw. However we have an issue where the tray needs to be removable and when we go to undo the screw holding the tray in place we find that the spacer unscrews from the stud as well. We have resolved this by putting glue into the stud end of the spacer but this is creating quality issues of its own so we are looking for another soloution.
One thing we are looking at is placing standoffs in the part instead of the stud + spacer, however there is an issue sourcing standoffs in the lengths we need.
I was thinking about getting a spacer where one side has a reversed thread and one standard so unscrewing one side wouldn't undo the second, however i cant seem to find any spacers that have this after my morning of searching. Does anyone know if these do exist? Is there a term i should be using in my search? Would this work as I envision?
Can anyone think of other soloutions that could be used.
Thanks for your help