Doing up a steel bolt into an alloy block the other day I started thinking about the forces when a bolt, or nut, is tightened ( no I didn't strip the thread while I thought!). This was apparently a Keith Duckworth interview question to graduate applicants
As the bolt tightens it develops tensile load as the threads wind down and the head doesn't follow. That load creates friction at the threads which creates torsion loads in the shank of the bolt. The objective is to generate enough tension load in the bolt to exceed any likely load reversal in service so there is always a residual tension to create enough friction to prevent the bolt vibrating loose. For things like flywheel bolts that residual tension has to give enough clamping force to allow high power transmission by metal to metal contact.
The text books explain that this means the highest load a bolt will ever see is during tightening as the torsional load vanishes when you remove the spanner. So why hasn’t anybody developed a way of pre heating bolts just before installation so they naturally clamp as they cool?
That exactly how hot rivets were use in ship and skyscraper building. The on-site heating is problem but it didn't stop the Empire State Building going up at one floor per day with hot rivets.
There is a gadget to heat bolts to remove them on the market
Could it be used to pre heat bolts and avoid over tightening them or let you generate even higher clamping loads as less torsional load would be needed?
Edited by mariner, 08 October 2016 - 11:29.