You deal with them quite a bit at a bodyshop. Other than that I've never came across them. I have those sockets and I gotta say I hardly ever used them.
I hate these little sumbitches with a passion. If you want to see one in action, pull your grill out of your car/truck. Most cases these are helping hold the grill emblem, along with double sided tape. There are other weird spots I see them, sometimes in interiors, sometimes on bumper covers, sometimes put in places just to piss you off and waste time trying to keep the things from spinning and come off. Palnuts were used on aviation engines as a locking device to discourage plain nuts from backing off. I use the word "discourage" instead of "prevent" because tests later showed that they were ineffective at that task.
I always used a box wrench on the outer hex, and Pratt & Whitney factory tools did too.
Later on there was a stamped, self-locking hex nut that had a similar internal hex. They were nicknamed "McNamara" nuts because Robert McNamara was Secretary of Defense and demanded all sorts of cost-saving designs be adopted, whether they worked or not. It was designated NAS679. These are actually quite strong. They could be torqued with a wrench that looked quite like the Snap-On Palnut socket, but I have only seen a couple of these sockets "in the wild", and that was at Boeing Surplus 30+ years ago.
Dorman SK28 Connecting Rod Lock Nut (Pal Nut) Service Kit_01 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Dorman SK28 Connecting Rod Lock Nut (Pal Nut) Service Kit_02 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Dorman SK28 Connecting Rod Lock Nut (Pal Nut) Service Kit_03 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Dorman SK28 Connecting Rod Lock Nut (Pal Nut) Service Kit_04 by four.cycle, on Flickr
lilredex said:"...many people regard them as a "johnnie come lately outfit..."
Dorman AS43 Expansion Plug (Freeze Plug) Assortment 01 by four.cycle, on Flickr
Dorman AS43 Expansion Plug (Freeze Plug) Assortment 02 by four.cycle, on FlickrGotcha....then if ur sticking the tool in the center of that. How does that nut even hold anything? Guess if have to see an application
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I've seen them on cylinder base nuts, and they go way back, probably into the 1930's. Willys used them over con rod nuts on the earlier Jeeps, and I never bothered to use them on re-assembly. The NAS679 nuts I always knew as "jet nuts", and have seen them used in auto racing.
NAS679 nuts are very different from Palnuts. NAS678 nuts are a heavy stamped nut with full machine screw threads in them and are a primary fastener used in aircraft applications.
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