TeslaApp
Mechanical
- Feb 24, 2020
- 2
Hi Everyone,
I am after some help please.
I am currently designing a boltable lifting point which consists of a removable padeye bolting to a frame using 6x M16 grade 8.8 bolts. The bolts go into a 25mm thick S355 steel tapped plate.
Could anyone please clarify the pull out capacity of an M16 thread in a 25mm thick S355 plate? I have read multiple resources and have come across 2 opinions:
1. that as a rule of thumb a 1.5D deep tapped hole will be stronger than the bolt. Or similarly that the thread depth can be increased to ensure the bolt stips before the plate.
2. The first thread sees 37% of the load and anything thicker than around 6 threads makes no difference to the strength.
I have used the formulas within Bickford's book to calculate the required thread depth based on comparing the UTS of the bolt and the strength of the plate. The formulas show the 25mm plate to be strong enough but this falls down when considering the 2nd theory (which Bickford mentions a few pages before the formulas but doesn't go into anymore detail)
Applying the 2nd theory,my calculations show that achieving full preload of 220Nm (75% proof strength, bolt tensile load around 72kN) would strip the threads as one thread cannot support 37% of the preload.
I have come across a commercially available lifting point which uses 4x M16 bolts for a larger load, specifying 240Nm torque and a similar plate thickness.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I am after some help please.
I am currently designing a boltable lifting point which consists of a removable padeye bolting to a frame using 6x M16 grade 8.8 bolts. The bolts go into a 25mm thick S355 steel tapped plate.
Could anyone please clarify the pull out capacity of an M16 thread in a 25mm thick S355 plate? I have read multiple resources and have come across 2 opinions:
1. that as a rule of thumb a 1.5D deep tapped hole will be stronger than the bolt. Or similarly that the thread depth can be increased to ensure the bolt stips before the plate.
2. The first thread sees 37% of the load and anything thicker than around 6 threads makes no difference to the strength.
I have used the formulas within Bickford's book to calculate the required thread depth based on comparing the UTS of the bolt and the strength of the plate. The formulas show the 25mm plate to be strong enough but this falls down when considering the 2nd theory (which Bickford mentions a few pages before the formulas but doesn't go into anymore detail)
Applying the 2nd theory,my calculations show that achieving full preload of 220Nm (75% proof strength, bolt tensile load around 72kN) would strip the threads as one thread cannot support 37% of the preload.
I have come across a commercially available lifting point which uses 4x M16 bolts for a larger load, specifying 240Nm torque and a similar plate thickness.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.