Temporaryworks
Structural
- Aug 27, 2017
- 46
I am an engineer practicing in Australia. I have a query about the use of 4140 general purpose high-tensile grade steel as a replacement for a typical/standard grade 8.8 structural bolts.
The context: I have designed an M48 grade 8.8 bolt (880MPa tensile strength) to be cast in to a concrete wall to prevent uplift of a tower crane structural steel grillage (big loads, pre-tensioned bolt). The client is having trouble sourcing the M48 bolt and has asked if they can use a 4140 grade rod and machine the ends to produce threads. I declined their request because I was worried that the grade 8.8 bolt has some properties that the 4140 grade steel doesn't have that make it suitable to be bolt i.e. non-brittle or corrosion properties.
I am not 100% certain that this decision was correct but felt uncomfortable with swapping the grade - could I have people's thoughts on this? Are there special properties which make code-compliant bolts safer than when compared with other steel grades?
The context: I have designed an M48 grade 8.8 bolt (880MPa tensile strength) to be cast in to a concrete wall to prevent uplift of a tower crane structural steel grillage (big loads, pre-tensioned bolt). The client is having trouble sourcing the M48 bolt and has asked if they can use a 4140 grade rod and machine the ends to produce threads. I declined their request because I was worried that the grade 8.8 bolt has some properties that the 4140 grade steel doesn't have that make it suitable to be bolt i.e. non-brittle or corrosion properties.
I am not 100% certain that this decision was correct but felt uncomfortable with swapping the grade - could I have people's thoughts on this? Are there special properties which make code-compliant bolts safer than when compared with other steel grades?