Square nut

A square nut is a four-sided nut. Compared to standard hex nuts, square nuts have a greater surface in contact with the part being fastened, and therefore provide greater resistance to loosening (though also greater resistance to tightening). They are also much less likely to become rounded-off after repeated loosening/tightening cycles. Square nuts are typically mated with square-headed bolts. Square nuts are used along with flat washers in order to avoid damage from its sharp edges and helps to increase the strength of the fastener. Square nuts can have standard, fine or coarse threading with platings of zinc yellow, plain, zinc clear, tin and cadmium, among others. Most can meet either the ASTM A194, ASTM A563, or ASTM F594 standard.[1]

Square nuts

History

Early nuts were made of wood and were used with wooden pegs. The square shape made it possible to form a tool in order to tighten nut in place. Later wooden fasteners were replaced by steel ones, and modern nuts are forged from steel stock bars and used along with steel bolts.

Square steel nuts were common on machinery of the late 19th through mid 20th century. Today hex nuts have displaced them. One reason is that a hex nut offers a new wrenching access at every 60°, whereas a square nut offers one only at every 90°.

Benefits

Tighten easily by gripping two sides

Work well in tight spaces by using needle nosed pliers

Work well in blind spots using pliers or a wrench

Can be a quick gauge to measure the position of the nut[2]

Application

Commonly used in furniture as a blind nut, they are also used in rail channels in order to prevent turning of rail when pressure is applied. They are also used to make perfect foundation in metal channels for hidden fasteners.

gollark: What happens if one library has offset 0, one has offset π and one has offset -1.6?
gollark: Do not have arrays. Only have hashtables, indexable by strings.
gollark: I have a better solution again!
gollark: The principle of negative indentation is simple enough: you put much whitespace before the outer bits of blocks, and less in the inner.
gollark: NEGATIVE VERTICAL TAB INDENTATION.

References

  1. "Nuts". Glaser & Associates, Inc. p. 3. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  2. "TOP FOUR BENEFITS OF USING A SQUARE NUT". Melfast. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.