as in accordance with RTFM and general cleanlyness thread cleaning is an important thing as it enables correct torquing... Speaking of correct torquing.
Theres a lot of bolts and a lot of ways to do them up some of them are seemingly quite large bolts with reasonabley low values. Others are quite large with respectabley HUGE torque values. The first type you just to up with a torque wrench and you can reuse them almost as many times as you like the second you get to do up one time and one time only. This type of bolt is normally a torque to yield fastener and it achieves its maximum tension just before it goes all marshmellowy then snaps.
before you start to torque a bolt you need to check the following things.
1. Thread type. Is it the same, theres a lot of different thread forms and sizes out there some of them are close enough to work together but arent.
2. Thread condition. is the thread useable, damaged, contaminated
3. Grade. Is it the right grade for the job? putting to high a grade bolt in can have just a bad result as too low a grade.
4. Material. Is the fastner your about to use the correct material for the job. Did you just put a stainless steel nut onto an aluminium bolt?
5. Lock and Lube. Before you put it in do you need oil, loctite, spring washer,nyloc?
6. Torque Scale. Am I doing it up to inch pound, foot pound, Newton Meters, Kilogram meters Grams/Centimeter or something even more obscure? If you're using the rattle gun dont forget that rattlepascles are different to doogameters.
Once youve got all that done you can have a go at putting it together. Use the correct tool for the job, Tight then belt it with a hammer or rolling it up till the rattlegun stops is an excelent way to produce this, a variable pitch form thread that starts out with a 1.5mm pitch and heads into 1.75mm.
Heres the normal thread, this is where the thread was engaged into the fastner so it couldnt stretch.
lead thread1-50.jpg
heres the bit where the thread didnt make it into the casting and being the weakest bit of the bolt this is where the initial stretching began. Much more torque and this bolt would have let go.
thread stretched1-75.jpg
and here it is in side profile on the thread gauge thats part of my thread file.
thread change.jpg
If you're lucky a snapped off bolt just means an extra hour or so worth of inconvenience as you battle whats left out with the easy outs, drill outs and any other means you can think off. Worst case you melt down a handfull of grands worth of engine. If the manual specifies a torque, use a torque wrench and be sure that its in calibration. If the manual says to just do it up then you're supposed to do it up to the standard torque for the diameter fixing and thread form. These are easy to look up on the net and are avialable at a small cost from professional fixing suppliers and no, just because supercheap and autobahn sell blister boxes with nuts and bolts in them they are not professional suppliers.



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