Keith-i
Well-Known Member
I’m replacing a number of cleats which have been on the boat for 30 plus years and were secured with standard nuts. Is it prudent to use nylocs on the replacements?
Personally I would not bother.I’m replacing a number of cleats which have been on the boat for 30 plus years and were secured with standard nuts. Is it prudent to use nylocs on the replacements?
Although galling is not a feature particular to Nylocs ..... any SS nut might do it unless you use a suitable grease.Nylocs are good, but I've seen plenty of cases where they have galled the threads on SS fasteners, which then requires the bolt to be cut.
Although galling is not a feature particular to Nylocs ..... any SS nut might do it unless you use a suitable grease.
Richard
Double standard nuts (assuming you have enough thread length left) would be my choice. That way, you have the benefit of both types of nut. They are also much easier than nylocs to install if you have a long bolt.
Nylocs are good, but I've seen plenty of cases where they have galled the threads on SS fasteners, which then requires the bolt to be cut.
I always cut the bolt to length. Long, exposed thread is not good.
Surely, that would be a good reason to use a nyloc?I try to but it needs to be a plain nut, not a nylock. Sometimes a loose nut is a distraction as I usually use an angle grinder and the nut will work towards the blade.
We're blessed with a raised capping rail moulded into the hull, so the bolts that hold down our deck fittings are in no danger of protruding into anything they shouldn't. So we have not had to cut our bolts down in those areas.
You raise a good point though - bolts should be the correct length (but sometimes are not). It goes without saying that any bolt cut to length should have a chamfer filed or sanded onto the ends, to prevent the galling issues already mentioned.
BTW, stainless threads gall from being tightened under load (used to draw up a gap), being tightended under load, being tightened without grease (if there are risk factors), and being tightened too fast. The Nylock ring is not a factor, since it is not in the threads, aplies rotational resistance, not pressure on the threads, and is down stream. Not related.