thinwater
Well-Known Member
I was rude. Sorry.
The Nylock was not the reason for galling. I have studied and researched the subject in my day job, and the reasons for galling are as I stated. The reason for the galling in your experience was almost certainly a combination of tightening too quickly under load (stainless heats up FAST when tightened under load) AND using the bolt to draw the surfaces together. Drawing surfaces together by tightening stainless bolts is a big no-no, and is the reason rigging turnbuckles never have stainless female threads. The bolt did not gall because it was a Nylock. The Nylock has no meaningful bearing on the thread load, which is the primary cause. Were the threads lubed before assembly? Google stainless galling.
No reason you can't use thread locker. I'm more likely to use double nuts; they're less bothersome if working alone.
The Nylock was not the reason for galling. I have studied and researched the subject in my day job, and the reasons for galling are as I stated. The reason for the galling in your experience was almost certainly a combination of tightening too quickly under load (stainless heats up FAST when tightened under load) AND using the bolt to draw the surfaces together. Drawing surfaces together by tightening stainless bolts is a big no-no, and is the reason rigging turnbuckles never have stainless female threads. The bolt did not gall because it was a Nylock. The Nylock has no meaningful bearing on the thread load, which is the primary cause. Were the threads lubed before assembly? Google stainless galling.
No reason you can't use thread locker. I'm more likely to use double nuts; they're less bothersome if working alone.
