Monday, February 24, 2014

Chapter 8: Threaded Fasteners

Fastening
Two or more components that are joined.  Do not require orthographic views, just the info to purchase the part.

Permanent Fasteners: 
adhesives, welds, braces, solders, rivets, nails.

Non-Permanent Fasteners: 
Screws, bolts, nuts, pins











  Thread Characteristics:

Direction
Most are right handed (righty tighty, lefty loosy)


Left handed threads - used where right handed threads would become loose in the application (lawn mower blades)






Lead
Distance traveled during one revolution of the fastener.
Lead = Pitch for single threaded screws.




double and triple threaded bolts - one revoltuon = 2 or 3 times the pitch. 

Double and triple threading give rapid motion + large thread surface.

Form
Cross-sectional shape, profile.



N - Rounded V profile (rounded for ease of manufacturing)

ACME - Heavy loads, high accuracy
BUTTRESS - High axial loads
SQ - hard to manufacture



Series
Number of threads per inch for a specific diameter.

coarse - general purpose used for holding
fine - to support added force, used in aircraft and automotive industries
extra fine - for short and small diameter fasteners.




Thread spec's:
3 standard representations:



 Class of Fit - How tight fasteners fit together.

Loose fit (1) for harsh corrosive environments.

Regular and Average fits (2) General purpose
Tight (3) For high pressures, stresses, and vibrating systems.


Thread Notes:
Notes on drawing that provide specs about thread.

Use a "leader" to connect note to thread


English Thread:

Above: Diameter = .25", 28 threads per inch, United National, Fine series, average fit, external, right handed.  (LH would be left handed, nothing written assumes right handed)


Thread Table:
1st column - diameter
(a coarse threaded 1.25" diameter bolt has 7 threads per inch)


Metric:
only listed as coarse or fine.
M - metric

90 - thread diameter
X
6 - pitch (in mm)

metric threads are usually defined by their pitch, that is, how much distance per thread, inch-based standards usually use the reverse logic, that is, how many threads occur per a given distance.Lead is the distance along the screw's axis that is covered by one complete rotation of the screw (360°). Pitch is the distance from the crest of one thread to the next. Because the vast majority of screw threadforms are single-startthreadforms, their lead and pitch are the same. 




Tolerance class: 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 + E, G, H.
#3-9 = tolerance grade (larger num = larger tolerance)
6 = medium = most common
Letter = type of fit:
E = loose
G = regular
H = tight





Head:
















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