SGKent
Banned
The question is on torque.
Let's say I have a 20' rod that draws two steel boxes together. There is a nut on each end. one nut I anchor by welding to one of the boxes and the other I torque to 100 ft lbs.
In another situation I have a 1' rod that draws two steel boxes together. There is a nut on each end. One nut I anchor by welding to the boxes and the other end I torque to 100 ft lbs.
Next scenario same as 1 but I use a 100' linear extension on the torque wrench so I can stand 100' above the nut.
Next scenario same as 2 but I use a 1000' linear extension on the wrench so I can stand 1000' above the nut.
Q. Assuming the same wrench is used in all cases, do all 4 nuts actually get the same 100 ft pounds when the wrench clicks, or is that load spread out across different rods and extensions. I have a suspicion that the load the nut applies on the thread is affected by the twist absorbed in the distance of the rod and extension.
The reason for this question pertains to a pinion bearing nut that needs a specific torque applied to it, and whether the fixture that hold the transmission affects that torque compared to the factory appliance that hold the transmission in the exact plane of the pinion nut vs way out at the end of the transmission. I am thinking inertia eats away a little of the torque. Hence a 10,000' rod with 100 ft pounds of torque at one end would not apply 100 ft pounds of torque to the other end. In the transmission situation the question becomes does the deformation of the housing affect the end value on the pinion nut.
Let's say I have a 20' rod that draws two steel boxes together. There is a nut on each end. one nut I anchor by welding to one of the boxes and the other I torque to 100 ft lbs.
In another situation I have a 1' rod that draws two steel boxes together. There is a nut on each end. One nut I anchor by welding to the boxes and the other end I torque to 100 ft lbs.
Next scenario same as 1 but I use a 100' linear extension on the torque wrench so I can stand 100' above the nut.
Next scenario same as 2 but I use a 1000' linear extension on the wrench so I can stand 1000' above the nut.
Q. Assuming the same wrench is used in all cases, do all 4 nuts actually get the same 100 ft pounds when the wrench clicks, or is that load spread out across different rods and extensions. I have a suspicion that the load the nut applies on the thread is affected by the twist absorbed in the distance of the rod and extension.
The reason for this question pertains to a pinion bearing nut that needs a specific torque applied to it, and whether the fixture that hold the transmission affects that torque compared to the factory appliance that hold the transmission in the exact plane of the pinion nut vs way out at the end of the transmission. I am thinking inertia eats away a little of the torque. Hence a 10,000' rod with 100 ft pounds of torque at one end would not apply 100 ft pounds of torque to the other end. In the transmission situation the question becomes does the deformation of the housing affect the end value on the pinion nut.
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