B.S. *Catigale wrote:Metric, SAE, or Whitworth percent??reduce torque by 10%
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(And you missed American Unified Coarse and British Association!)
*(British Standard)
B.S. *Catigale wrote:Metric, SAE, or Whitworth percent??reduce torque by 10%
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And a case study showing that lubrication of fasteners, without a suitable recalculation of the torque, led to significant failure in service:BOLT TORQUE FACTORS
LUBRICANT OR PLATING -- TORQUE CHANGES
Oil -- Reduce torque 15% to 25%
Dry Film (Teflon or moly based) -- Reduce torque 50%
Dry Wax (Cetyl alcohol) -- Reduce torque 50%
Chrome plating -- No change
Cadmium plating -- Reduce torque 25%
Zinc plating -- Reduce torque 15%
Baseline torque is calculated for a non-lubricated, un-plated bolt.
Well, now, that's with a *new* fastener. With an old fastener that has likely been stretched and no longer has the elasticity it once had, you're guess is as good as mine!Catigale wrote:So with moly grease film, I should be torquing to only 50 ftlbs....eeeekksss...that seems awful loose
What does a low voltage alarm have to do with motoring at a slower speed for several hours?Matt19020 wrote:.. went to throttle up and buzzers start going off “Low Voltage Alarm” and boat drops into safe mode 3000 Rpm max…but runs fine all gauges show good charge rates and battery voltage.
About a minute goes by all quiet now throttle up again and same thing happens…two more times this happened. Shut motor off and restarted…same thing happened. Even tried switching over to battery two.
We were approaching marina to refuel and figured I will look at it when we get in there.
You do not want to be disabled in the canal no where to run it is all channel…and narrow.
They do not service Suzuki motors I called a mechanic and he did not recommend running 60+ miles with motor in the safe mode about 6- 7 hour run.