White Paper 02
White Paper 02
White Paper 02
Technical Bulletin
SAE J449 SAE J995 ISO 898-1 ISO 898-2 ASTM A193 ASTM A194 ASTM A307 ASTM A325 ASTM A354 ASTM A449 ASTM A490
A great general reference containing data from all of these sources and more is Every Thing An Engineer Should Know About Threaded Fasteners, written by Alexander Blake. This book is published by Marcel Dekker, Inc. and is available from the Industrial Fastener Institute (IFI) at 216-241-1482. Below are charts taken from the above mentioned standards for inch and metric coarse thread bolt and nut sizes covering 1/4 inch through 1 inch and M5 through M24. These charts show the minimum ultimate strength values for the bolts and the proof load capacity values for the nuts. When determining what nut grade to use with a given bolt: 1. Find the bolts ultimate tensile strength by thread size and strength grade in the appropriate chart. 2. Locate the thread size line in the appropriate nut chart that matches the bolts thread size and select the nut grade to use where the nuts proof load capacity value is equal to or greater than the bolts ultimate tensile strength. Examples of correct nut selections for given bolts:
Thread size 3/4-10 Bolt Grade Or Property Class SAE Grade 5 Bolts Ultimate Tensile Strength 40,100 lbs. Nut Grade Or Property Class SAE Grade 2 Or ASTM A563 Grade B Property Class 10 Nut Proof Load Capacity 40,100 lbs.
M16X2.0
163,000 N
164,900 N
Fastener users should always make the final choice of which nut to use with which bolt, but if asked, suppliers should share these principles with them. Fastener users should be warned that using a lower grade nut to save on the initial purchase price of fasteners could prove to be false economy. If the nuts threads strip during installation and the failure goes undetected, the entire assembly may fail when it is put into use. When this type of catastrophic failure occurs the supplier usually has to defend himself against accusations about having supplied fasteners of poor quality. This is unfair and unjust when the root cause of the failure is poor nut selection by the user. INDUSTRIAL FASTENERS INSTITUTE
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