- Mon Aug 24, 2020 7:56 am
#92436
I think it would be hard to pick a worse thread to screw into fairly low quality alloy than a cycle thread. My local engineer was horrified that's what they were using when I asked him to make some slightly over-length gearbox studs with a square end on for me.
They don't help by using very fine pitch threads, compounding the issue by using worn machining to cut them, there is very poor penetration of the thread into the alloy. You can wind the cylinder head studs right out out of some of the iron barrel bullets before they even come close to being tight. The worst one is the little stud that holds the barrel down on the right hand side just above the tappet cover. I routinely fit an insert to these.PeteF wrote: ↑Mon Aug 17, 2020 8:50 pmI'm old school and don't use a torque wrench much.
Except! Steel studs into alloy! It's oh so easy to overdo it. Steel on steel you have plenty of leeway but not steel into alloy. On fact, strictly speaking, you shouldn't do steel to alloy, there should be an insert.
You'd never find a alloy thread on anything really critical like an airframe.
I think it would be hard to pick a worse thread to screw into fairly low quality alloy than a cycle thread. My local engineer was horrified that's what they were using when I asked him to make some slightly over-length gearbox studs with a square end on for me.