Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 18 11:32:15 EDT 2002 | yngwie
Hi Experts, Here in Box builds area, there was an argument on frequency of verifying torque reading. Shiftly changed to daily and now we are changing it to weekly. The reason for relaxing this frequency is b'cos the data we collected shown that the
Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 18 11:33:25 EDT 2002 | yngwie
Hi Experts, Here in Box builds area, there was an argument on frequency of verifying torque reading. Shiftly changed to daily and now we are changing it to weekly. The reason for relaxing this frequency is b'cos the data we collected shown that the
Electronics Forum | Fri Oct 18 21:42:04 EDT 2002 | caldon
We did weekly and monthly. Final assembly (Heavy use) recieved weekly. Field service area, sub assembly, low volume, ..... we went monthly. I wrote the ISO specs to read "Calbration of screw drivers to be monitored and logged"( this Simplified of
Electronics Forum | Sun Aug 01 11:31:59 EDT 2004 | Andrew
How do you define torque setting for screw?What does 1)Screw with Bolt size 3-48 means ? 2)Thread Size M3 means? 3)Fasterner Property Class?
Electronics Forum | Wed May 16 08:33:27 EDT 2001 | caldon
STUMPED?? Is it the screw that determines the Torque setting or the assembly being fastened? All my Torque experience has been determined by the assembly..... Obviously the threads have torque specs but I dont think that is what we are talking about
Electronics Forum | Wed May 22 12:59:09 EDT 2013 | cyber_wolf
That sounds very odd what smter is saying. The screws around the outside of the fans have nothing to do with the bearings. You only really need to tighten those screws enough to squish the gasket a little. No special torque settings required. As lon
Electronics Forum | Thu Aug 30 22:36:36 EDT 2001 | davef
While I don't understand why, this topic comes-up fairly often on SMTnet. [That the topic recurs indicates there truely is a problem and I'm just too doopy to understand it.] Several things: 1 Check the fine SMTnet Archives. 2 Some glue suppliers kn
Electronics Forum | Mon Aug 02 09:26:15 EDT 2004 | davef
Q1: How do you define torque setting for screw? A1: Talk to people at your nut supplier. Some nut suppliers post torque tables on the web. For instance: http://www.thelenchannel.com/1torque.html http://www.marfas.com/Ttorque.shtml http://www.pac
Electronics Forum | Tue Nov 06 18:39:08 EST 2001 | MikeF
Also, check the website for Assembly magazine, http://www.assemblymag.com, they have some good information on the basics of torque. Determining the "correct" torque value can become very complicated very quickly. The same size screws made from differ
Electronics Forum | Wed May 16 12:08:24 EDT 2001 | raton
Some thoughts- Torque applied to each joint is case specific. I know there are charts and all, but they don't account for YOUR situation such as screwing a fab to a chassis(or your aluminum screw). If the customer sets a spec then use it. (But i