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#1
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
5/32" rivets; #8-32, #10-32, and 1/4-20 screws.
The 5/32" rivets are most common individual hardware, followed by #8-32 and #10-32 screws for general purpose mechanisms. 1/4-20 screws are pretty much exclusively used for tube axles (dead axle shaft+standoff combo) or high-loading parts. I try to avoid #10-24 and #6-32 like the plague as these are the most commonly broken tap sizes due to their ratio of pitch to shank diameter (look at a #6-32 tap wrong and it breaks), and #10-32 is WAY more common for COTS stuff. |
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#2
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
We use #10-32 and 1/4''-20 bolts (socket head preferable, hex head for 1/4''-20 also OK, phillips head is a no-no since they're basically designed to strip) for structural bolts. Trying to move more towards the former as the latter really is overkill for most stuff in FRC. Nylock nuts are standard.
After years of frustration, mismatched nuts, and accidental crossthreading, we will no longer purchase #10-24 on either team I mentor. |
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#3
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Make sure you get the nylon/teflon nuts that self-lock (Nylock Nuts) so that you don;t have to loctite screws. They come in thick and thin profiles for different applications as well. They are so easy to use and never have I seen one vibrate loose if properly tightened.
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#4
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
We use mostly 10-32 on our robot. 1/4"-20 is good for some high-load applications. Dead axle screws.
Nylock nuts are really nice, but get some thin ones too. They come in heights of 9/32" normally and 1/8" (4/32") for the thin ones IIRC for 10-32 screws. We use a lot of 1/8" rivets. Vex uses 5/32" for the versachassis. 3/16" rivets are interchangeable with 10-32 screws in terms of hole size. |
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#5
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
We use almost exclusively #10-32 hardware and 3/16 rivets so we only have to drill one hole everywhere. #8-32 screws and 5/32nd rivets are used to interface with weird Vex stuff sometimes.
Socket head cap screws basically every time. |
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#6
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Whatever the job requires. #10-24 is generally the first bolt we reach for (if something can't be riveted). We'll use 10-32 if we need more thread engagement, but they just take to long to screw in and out. Our one general rule is absolutely no metric unless we're forced to.
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#7
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Quote:
The only real advantages that find thread have are the the bolt itself is slightly stronger and that it is slightly less prone to loosening from vibration. http://www.bestbolt.com/white_papers/white_paper_08.pdf |
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#8
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Quote:
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#9
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
#8-32 screws are nice because you can easily cut them to size if needed.
We stock 1/4", #10, #8, #6, and #4. Socket cap is the only way to go. I would also request some #10-32 rivet nuts (ribbed) and some #8-32 threaded inserts like this. The inserts are useful for bumper building. |
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#10
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
We've standardized to 10-32 as much as possible. Generally SHCS style. Rivnuts, t-nuts, and nylok nuts. It has made life suck a whole lot less to standardize everything.
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#11
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Last year, almost everything we had was 10-32, allen-drive cap screws and nylon nuts (all steel). This worked out quite well for us; we might change to a different size or two this year (I'm mentoring programming this year, so not on top of the discussion), but we'll definitely have a small set of sizes for anything that we're building. When you do pick a standard size or sizes, STOCK UP ON TOOLS IN THOSE SIZE(S)! You'll never seem to have enough, since (for 10-32) everyone wants the 5/32" Allen and the 5/16" hex wrench at the same time.
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#12
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
What's the advantage of using socket head over button head?
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#13
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Socket head typically has a deeper hex, so it's harder to strip out.
I like 10-32's over 10-24's because it's harder to break the 10-32 tap. As a rule of thumb, I try to get more than 6 threads of engagement in a tapped hole in aluminum. With a 10-32, that works out to 6/32 = 0.1875", but a 10-24 requires 6/24 = 0.250". Once you've used both for a while, it becomes easy to identify the different threads on bolts, and you can check to see if your nut threads easily on a known bolt. We've used 1/4-20's as axles for flywheel shooters and pivots for catapult shooters, as well as gearbox mounts. 3/8-16 or 3/8-24 is our favorite for dead axles. |
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#14
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
You must not have "determined" kids that will get that 10-24 nut on the 10-32 bolt. Yeah sure, it'll go on...with enough torque.
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#15
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Re: Good Screw Sizes fo General Use
Quoting for truth. As mentioned earlier in the thread, our solution to this problem is to just not buy 10-24 anymore, which removes the potential for the error in the first place. On a team as large as 449, it's just not worth the hassle for the few places where it's nice to have coarser thread.
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