No lock washers. Split LWs are useless on metal to metal joints and extremely rare on vehicles today
Imo the flange-head has its own washer-bearing surface. So you are all-set. If automotive I would put it back in as it came out....iow unless a crusty washer fell out of there as rusty dust I'd just go back with the bolt.
Useless? They are still used on farm equipment......

Useless? They are still used on farm equipment......
Go to boltscience.com and look at the Junkers test videos. Joints with a LW perform worse than without.
Try and find a split LW on a Honda car made since the 1990s. Some engineers got the test data from the 1960s. Others still haven't ��
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NASA wrote a paper on fastener tech back in the early 90's; in it, they showed that the split ring washers were worse for loosening fasteners. One result was that those washers were banned for use on Space Station Freedom/International Space Station hardware.

Yes I'm sure you are much more qualified on the matter than NASA. What do they knowThat is also the same NASA that had people believing an O-ring couldn't fail in cold temps and cause a fuel leak.
When you remove a bolt and you see where the washer dug into both surfaces, my guess is that lock washer is working.
With that said, to each your own in what you think works best (besides safety wire)![]()
Yes I'm sure you are much more qualified on the matter than NASA. What do they know
They proved awhile back they are. I think even aVe touched on em
Yeah, he said the only one that worked we’re some kind of double serrated ones but the name of them escapes me at the moment.
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nord-lock washers. they work but they certainly arent "the only" one that works. although I have seen them fail just recently. I'd call it an "extreme duty" application though. They were holding the plows on a rock crusher at a cement plant. 30mm bolts.
Yeah that’s them and that would probably qualify as an extreme application.
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Does this bolt need a washer? Or is that built-in
When it came time to reintstall them the plant said "we don't have any of those... so just reuse them" They are a one use item fyi...
Ended up welding keystock beside one flat of the bolt to keep it from backing out.
If you are referring to a flat washer, then no washer is typically needed, but there might be times where you might use that bolt with a fender washer or other large OD washer. Unless it serrated on the underside, you would still need a lock washer (though it looks like that bolt had either loctite or vibra-tite on it)
The problem with that idea is split washers do not provide any meaningful amount of preload.The split washer has a very specific use. That is where the bolt or screw is too large to properly preload. The split washer then applies tension that the shank cannot. Trailer hitch balls are one example. Proper torque for a 3/4 hex nut on a trailer ball is on the order of 365 foot pounds. How many do you think are tightened to that spec? The same thing happens on farm equipment. Farmers do not carry a torque wrench around on the tractor.
Not really. In general: a screw is always threaded directly into something, and a bolt is always threaded into nut. However a bolt can be turned, or the nut can be turned. Even then, there is no real true agreed upon definition.As an aside, all the photos in this series have been screws not bolts. A bolt is not designed to be turned. That is the definition of a screw.
Go to boltscience.com and look at the Junkers test videos. Joints with a LW perform worse than without.
Try and find a split LW on a Honda car made since the 1990s. Some engineers got the test data from the 1960s. Others still haven't![]()
I dont think I've ever seen a 3/4 shank on a trailer hitch ball...
Not really. In general: a screw is always threaded directly into something, and a bolt is always threaded into nut. However a bolt can be turned, or the nut can be turned. Even then, there is no real true agreed upon definition.
Never said I was more qualified. I said I've seen split lock washers work just fine where as the fasteners that didn't have washers or had flattened/junk washers loosened up. Why was that then?
As for NASA, I just don't take them for 100%. Like I said before, how smart were they when they failed to believe cold temps, O-rings and a fuel leak wouldn't happen together at the same time? Their smartness or their being more qualified, cost 7 people their lives......
Crush washers are for maintaining a liquid seal, not for holding the fastener.Wouldn't an aluminum lock washer deform under torque and thus provide more grip/hold? Unless the deformed aluminum will eventually work itself loose. I guess you can also look at the lock washer as preventing a tight mating of the 2 surfaces.