Content deleted Content added
→Elliptical offset nuts: nonsense reference to a thread metaform |
m →top |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
A '''distorted thread locknut''',<ref name="McMaster3139">McMaster, p. [http://www.mcmaster.com/#catalog/114/3139 3139].</ref> is a type of [[locknut]] that uses a deformed section of [[screw thread|thread]] to keep the [[nut (hardware)|nut]] from loosening
==High temperature use==
Because these nuts are solid metal, they
==Safety factors==
Line 8:
==Elliptical offset nuts==
Elliptical offset nuts is a catch-all category that encompasses designs known as '''oval locknuts'''<ref name="McMaster3139"/> or '''non-slotted hex locknuts''',.<ref>{{Citation | title = Non-slotted hex locknut | url = http://www.spstech.com/aero/products/nuts/non-slotted-hex.html | accessdate = 2008-11-30 | url-status = dead | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20110513080637/http://spstech.com/aero/products/nuts/non-slotted-hex.html | archivedate = 2011-05-13 }}.</ref> The salient feature is that the thread has been deformed at one end so that the threads are no longer perfectly circular. The deformed end is usually shaped into an ellipse or [[wikt:obround|obround]] triangle. These are known as '''one-way''' nuts as the nut may be easily started on the male fastener from the bottom non-deformed portion
==Centerlock nuts==
|