chrishelen
N/A
Hi, what are the best bolts to use to attach my new shiny mounts to a steel bearer? I'm thinking high tension, but might they be a bit to brittle?
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The biggest that will fit...
I would be slightly wary of Avocet's comment about little load on them.. Bolts are to be used ONLY in tension, never ever shear. To prevent shear the bolt must be tighend enough that friction between the 2 components being bolted together is sufficient to prevent slippage. So, even when the engine is mounted nice and flat you must ensure that it will not dance about.
Indeed the prop thrust is often transmitted to the hull through the engine mounts, but the engine mounting bolts (sticking up from the mount) experience compression due to engine weight and bending, not shear, due to thrust and engine vibration. The bolts used to secure the mounts to the hull should only be in tension, with friction between the mount and the hull preventing shear.The thrust created by the prop into the prop shaft is often transmitted to the hull through the engine mounting bolts which will be ,in this case, in shear..
The bolts used to secure the mounts to the hull should only be in tension, with friction between the mount and the hull preventing shear.
I think it's pretty safe to assume the OP intended to tighten the bolts when fitting them!! You don't need very much torque in an application like that to generate PLENTY of friction. Worth having a look at how the wheels are held on to your car, in fact!The biggest that will fit...
I would be slightly wary of Avocet's comment about little load on them.. Bolts are to be used ONLY in tension, never ever shear. To prevent shear the bolt must be tighend enough that friction between the 2 components being bolted together is sufficient to prevent slippage. So, even when the engine is mounted nice and flat you must ensure that it will not dance about.
Somebody cleverer than me could probably do the sums, but pretty sure that 8*M8 bolts in shear would more than cope with the maximum thrust that a 30hp motor can generate.
They would cope with consummate ease (assuming of course, they had nuts on and were tightened more than just finger tight)! Consider that your car wheels are held by bolts (or studs) in shear and so, therefore, are the brake discs. They'll happily stop a ton-and-a-half of car, braking at 1G all day and the bolts will barely touch the sides of the holes. In fact, you could machine all the bolt holes out of the brake discs and the clamping force and friction alone would be plenty.