Topcat47
Well-Known Member
I borrowed an old NSU quickly from a workmate when my "real" bike was off the road. It was three speeds with a dual seat. My girlfriend wanted me to buy it.
Even better, stainless self-tappers are much less expensive than stainless woodscrews.
Can anyone please help explain this from the website
http://www.boltscience.com/pages/basics2.htm
Why is the loade on the bolt less when tightenedm after all load is still transferred to the support plate via the bolt regardless of whether the nut is up tight or wound almost undone. What am I missing?
Ants
Can anyone please help explain this from the website
http://www.boltscience.com/pages/basics2.htm
Why is the loade on the bolt less when tightenedm after all load is still transferred to the support plate via the bolt regardless of whether the nut is up tight or wound almost undone. What am I missing?
Ants
Not only do they work, but you can put them in with a hammer.
Oops, wrong thread.
Ahahahhaaaaaaa, see what I did there..
Yes.
I am unlikely to be back there in the near future but will try to have a pic sent to me.
I inspect derricks, the majority use Palnuts. Nobody uses double nuts or old style thin locknuts these days. Are you sure it's not some modern lock nut design? A Palnut looks like an old thin style lock nut and sits on top of the structural nut.
Palnut, page 16
http://www.dropsonline.org/assets/documents/DROPS-Reliable-Securing-Rev03-Low-Resolution.pdf
This booklet is what the industry considers to be best practice now to stop people being killed by dropped items.
A large portion of humble pie for me please.
I was quite adamant in #29 that lock nuts were in use. Having recent occasion to revisit the installation and scratch an itch, it is indeed palnuts that are in use in all the structural elements.
I've never heard of palnuts.
Richard
Otherwise known as a Birmingham screwdriver,Not only do they work, but you can put them in with a hammer.
Oops, wrong thread.
Ahahahhaaaaaaa, see what I did there..
See my earlier post with a link to the Reliable Securing Handbook used by the offshore industry as part of the drive to reduce incidents from Dropped Objects.
Beware the small sizes on the steel version, the galvanising is terrible and it wears away rapidly to the point that the Palnut just corrodes and turns to dust when touched. If using in a marine environment, use the stainless versions.