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Bob wrote:
Brian Whatcott wrote: Annealed 316 wire yields at a pressure of 34,800 lb. [see Matweb] The cross section area of a 1/4 in X 20 tpi screw is about pi X r X r square inches where r is the effective radius. Using r = 0.06 inch gives a = 0.011 sq in so the force at yield is about 0.011 X 34800 lb That's about 390 lb. The bolt will break before the nut. You could give a X5 safety factor and take the maximum unit load as 75 lb each. You're welcome Brian Whatcott Altus OK Brian, Thanks for walking me through that. Seems straight forward with your explination. Now time for me to get back to the boat. Bob I think this whole analysis, while very good, leaves out an important part: the threads. When screwed into fiberglass or wood (or perhaps even aluminum, depending on the length of thread engagement), the failure mode will be to rip the threads out of the hole, rather than to break the screw body in tension. Also, computing the max load on the assumption that it is indeed the body which fails (like for example, if the screw were to be installed into a stainless plate), fails to take into account the stress riser effect of the threads. Because of this it is likely that the screw will fail well before the calculated value of 390 lb. Thus the 5x safety factor based on the theoretical which Brian recommended... bob |
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