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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==
High
==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
==Centerlock nuts==
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==Partially depitched nuts==
Partially depitched nuts are commonly called [[Philidas]] nuts,<ref>{{Citation | title = Philidas nut | url = http://www.philidaslimited.co.uk/home.html | accessdate = 2012-12-01 | url-status = dead | archiveurl = https://web.archive.org/web/20150307180443/http://www.philidaslimited.co.uk/home.html | archivedate = 2015-03-07 }}.</ref> after their originator and current manufacturer, and differ from the above three nut types insofar as a portion of the thread is displaced axially, this being facilitated by one or more slots perpendicular to the axis.
==See also==
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