Mountainman wrote:
I'm no mechanical engineer, or metallurgist, so I'm just wondering if anyone has any reason to believe that the factory 'degrees' method for torquing bolts has any advantage to torquing to a set value?
I was told that the degrees method was developed because machines were applying the torque. But, that doesn't make much sense because in the same procedure it starts with a set value of 22 ft/lbs...
The turn of nut or bolt method was devised to deal with the wide variance in clamping force experienced when torquing a bolt to a supposed final
torque value that provided a calculated clamping force. The problem is that slight stochastic variations in different bolt characteristics (thread diameter, pitch, thread profile, steel hardness and yield strength, thread roughness, etc. etc.) while all within spec, resulted in wide variation in actual clamping force.
The school solution for those custom building engines, before the advent of commercial high strength high accuracy bolts (ARP and others) was to lap each of the nuts and/or bolts together in matched pairs to custom fit each bolt and/or nut together, by repeatedly torquing and loosening the bolt to a value just below the yield point, then to do a final torque to the calculated value. The problem with this approach from a manufacturing standpoint, of course, is that this takes a LOT of time, and time is expense. The solution adopted is to rotate the bolt to a point guaranteed to stress the bolt past the yield point, so that it stretches, and stays at the yield point. For applications involving a single installation of a production grade fastener, this is more reliable than torquing. PROVIDED that the steel is within spec, and that the bolt does in fact yield. In the case of steel connecting rods in the VMM CRd engine, as opposed to aluminum heads, I'd be reasonably confident that the design of the TTY rod bolts was correctly done, especially since we have not heard of significant numbers of rod bolt failures.
BTW, it is worth noting that ARP and others sell high strength precision ground rod bolts, too, not just studs.