No cross reference is made to other applications.
No Federal Government support was received in the development of this Invention.
No sequence listing, table, or computer program is attached or accompanies this Application.
The present Invention relates generally to fasteners, and more particularly to threaded posts emanating from a generally planar surface, including but not restricted to bolts. A post is defined as a regular cylindrical prism, solid or hollow. A threaded post is defined as a post with a thread helically decorating the external cylindrical surface of the post. A bolt is defined as an externally threaded post emanating from a generally planar surface constituting the underside of a polygonal prismatic structure equipped with lateral flats for the application of torque, such as supplied by the application of a wrench. A bolt head is defined as said prismatic structure. A posthole is a cavity or perforation in a second part. Said posthole is equipped with an internal thread with engineering characteristics including thread count, pitch shape, length, and diameter. A thread mate can be achieved between the externally threaded post of a bolt and an internally threaded posthole in a second part, if said engineering characteristics are designed to be complementary or matching. A bolt threaded into a matching internally threaded post hole set into or perforating a second part constitutes a thread mate. Threading in the bolt fully is achieved by means of application of torque to flat features provided on laterally on the bolt head. A bolt is threaded between a plurality of perforated flat surfaces prior to threading into a nut or other posthole structure. Once the bolt is fully threaded into adjacent to the underside of the posthole, the flat on the underside of the bolt head coincides with the closest generally flat surface. Torque on the bolt head forces the flats together to achieve a stressed flat mate. The thread mate at this point is also torqued into a stressed position. Overtorquing is defined as the application of torque that exceeds a breaking point in the bolt or nut in a thread mate.
The thread mate between a bolt and a nut is an ancient device for fastening, by the clamping of a plurality of thin, perforated, generally planar surfaces between the underside of the bolt head and the nut flat surface. Torque on a bolt head forces the flats together to achieve a stressed flat mate that works in concert with the stressed thread mate to prevent unthreading of the thread mate, a critical engineering objective.
Provision of excess torque force on the bolt head can overcome the attachment of the bolt head to the externally threaded post, failure occurring at the orthogonal discontinuity constituted by the circular join occurring between the thread post and the bolt head. The necessity of complete threading in to achieve said stressed mates prevents the use of conventional join strengthening devices such as ribs and fillets, leading to the dehiscion of the bolt head from the threaded bolt body, solid or hollow, upon overtorquing of the bolt head.
In contrast, the Invention presented in this Application allows complete threading in of a threaded post while providing protection against dehiscion of the threaded post from the generally planar surface of a part, through the decoration of said threaded post and generally planar surface with negative ribs, optionally provided with fillets on discontinuous edges.
This Application describes the device constituting the negative rib. The negative rib refers to a cavity that spans the join between a threaded post, as in but not restricted to a bolt threaded post, and the generally flat surface of a head structure from which said threaded post emanates, as in but not restricted to a bolt head. Said cavity does not perforate either the post surface nor the generally flat plane to which the post is attached. The negative rib interrupts the circular join between the threaded post and the generally flat surface of the head and in so doing provides support against dehiscion of the post upon application of torque to the head after complete threading in of the threaded post into a complementarily threaded posthole in a second part. The negative rib thereby enables complete threading in of the threaded post into the threaded posthole. Strengthening of said negative rib can be achieved by variation in number, width, and depth of the negative rib as well as by filleting of sharp edges in the negative rib.
The bolt shown in
Addition of ribs or robust fillets or chamfers spanning the join 11 between the threaded post 4 and the generally planar flat surface 2 from which the threaded post 4 emanates could improve the breaking point characteristics of the bolt 1 at the join 11. However, the addition of structures at the join would block full tightening of the bolt 1 to the second part 8 through the perforated planar structures 19 and 20