In this paper, the author seeks to present in easy‐to‐understand diagrams the effect of external loads on the pretensioned bolt in a bolted joint. In most cases, bolted joints are tightened up with little thought for the size of the external loads that may later be imposed upon them. Since external loads always change the preload in the bolt, it is important to know by how much the bolt load changes. Too much preload leaves too little margin for the external or working load; too little preload and the cyclic stresses cause the bolt to fatigue, assuming the bolted joint is subjected to frequent working loads. No two bolts are alike, even under the most rigorous quality control production methods, but with more sophisticated nut and bolt tightening equipment coming onto the market, better results can be achieved. The use of these diagrams will help engineers and designers understand what is happening in the bolted joint.
Article navigation
Review Article|
July 01 1981
Pretension Diagrams for Bolted Joints Available to Purchase
Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 2059-9366
Print ISSN: 0002-2667
© MCB UP Limited
1981
Aircraft Engineering (1981) 53 (7): 25–32.
Citation
DONALD E (1981), "Pretension Diagrams for Bolted Joints". Aircraft Engineering, Vol. 53 No. 7 pp. 25–32, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb035738
Download citation file:
463
Views
Suggested Reading
Optimisation of pre/post-stressed embedment-type timber joint
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Structures and Buildings (April,2011)
Numerical analysis of tensile failure of bolted composite laminates
Multidiscipline Modeling in Materials and Structures (December,2022)
Classical analysis of preloaded bolted joint load distributions
International Journal of Structural Integrity (August,2018)
Optimisation of ground anchor head for non-destructive testing
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Engineering and Computational Mechanics (December,2016)
Criteria for self loosening of fasteners under vibration
Aircraft Engineering (October,1972)
Related Chapters
4. Bolts and bolted joints
Structural detailing in steel: A comparative study of British, European and American codes and practices
DESIGN OF BOLTED CONNECTIONS AND STABILITY OF HADNCHED MEMBERS
LARGE SPAN PORTAL FRAMES IN STRUCTURAL STEELWORK
16 Design philosophies of the NATM system bolting
Design and Performance of Underground Excavations: ISRM Symposium — Cambridge, U.K., 3–6 September 1984
Recommended for you
These recommendations are informed by your reading behaviors and indicated interests.
