Anyone know what the letters on this bolt head mean?
It's a .5"X1.5" grade 5 rib neck carriage bolt.
I need to replace all 8 of them...with grade 8 and no ribs (to strip) this time!
Looks like them bolts are in a hitch. They look to already be grade 8 bolts
:rofl:
Ya think Kurt? He took those pics of his bolts and his new hitch.
IIRC it is ILLEGAL to use grade 8 bolts in hitches, goosenecks and 5th wheels.
Those are grade 5 bolts. The letters don't mean anything I don't think. I believe they just signify the coating used on the finish of the bolt.
IIRC it is ILLEGAL to use grade 8 bolts in hitches, goosenecks and 5th wheels.
Dale,why is that?
Dale,why is that?
I would think they want a bolt that will bend before it snapsfor sayety sake.
Those are grade 5 bolts. The letters don't mean anything I don't think. I believe they just signify the coating used on the finish of the bolt.
IIRC it is ILLEGAL to use grade 8 bolts in hitches, goosenecks and 5th wheels.
does that explain why a grade 5 might have been a better choice for a balancer bolt on my old motor. i used a grade 8 to seat the balancer. sheared it off within 2 mos...... appearantly to brittle??
No, Grade 8 is stronger/tougher than Grade 5 across the board. You probably would have popped the grade 5 on install with the same torque.
These grades are standards. Specialty bolts and fasteners are another creature all together. Head bolts, Flywheel bolts, and connecting rod/main bolts are some ones that come to mind with "special" properties for their application. IIRC, the darn balancer bolt is too, but I would have to look again.
so a grade 8 wasn't even the right bolt for this application?? drilling a grade 8 bolt to tap and back out of the crank is one of my least favorite things to do.....i found that out the hard way.