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#51
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
On Thursday, July 21, 2016 at 9:45:47 AM UTC-7, Dan Marotta wrote:
Very informative, thanks! How about this for the use in question: Drill the holes in the trailer tongue oversize and use a steel bushing the exact length of the outer tube of the tongue. Then use a high strength bolt to hold it together. Or simply a trailer hitch pin with a spring clip or lock to hold it in place. On 7/21/2016 10:23 AM, Craig Funston wrote: On Thursday, July 21, 2016 at 7:43:44 AM UTC-7, Dan Marotta wrote: A question for the mechanical engineers on this group: Isn't it true that the load rating of a bolt is an indication of the tensile strength of the bolt and not its shear strength? Is there any indication of the shear strength of a bolt? Can anything be inferred about shear strength from tensile strength? On 7/20/2016 8:31 PM, Dave Springford wrote: Hi Tom, Very doubtful that the nut came off from vibration. Nylock nuts are used and they are not prone to this. My trailer is towed behind a motorhome with a large axle to tow ball distance resulting a bending moment on the tongue and shear load on the (front) bolt (in particular). After my post, another motorhome owner checked his trailer and found that the same bolt on his trailer was broken - shear plane through the threads, bad design - but fortunately the rest of the bolt was still in the tongue so he was able to take pictures of it. It was certainly a failure due to shear. I question why AL-KO switched from 1000 MPa bolts to 800 MPa bolts at some point. I checked several other older trailers than mine and they all had 10.9 bolts. Mine had 8.8, as did the other trailer that failed. -- Dan, 5J For typical steels used in bolt fabrication, shear strength correlates pretty well with tensile strength. Current guidance from the American Institute of Steel Construction use a shear strength equal to 60% of the tensile strength (ultimate values, not yield). This is for a bearing type (not friction) connection with threads included in the shear plane. High strength bolts are allowed shears up to 75% of tensile if the threads are excluded from the shear plane. Craig 7Q -- Dan, 5J Drilling oversize holes in the tongue for a bushing just makes the bushing the bearing member and takes away any possibility of developing clamping force on the tongue which is where it's needed. The bushing could be welded into the tongue or shorter bushings that are fed in from the end of the square tube to brace the sidewalls against compression from the bolt could be used Craig |
#52
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
Not so good, better would be a "reverse fishmouth" on a steel bushing that fit INSIDE the inner tube and aligned with the bolt hole. Then, properly torque the bolt (depends on grade, diameter and length) so the bolt loads a "solid structure".
Currently, the design allows for some "crush" of the tongue thus losing some of the clamping force. Threads in shear are also not a good thing for strength, but may be fine for "torque limiting" as in a snowblower auger. Note: you could also use a length of bar stock inside the inner tube rather than my first thought. |
#53
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
Another note, I was describing a fix for the round tube tongue, square tube would be similar. Another thought, whatever "internal spacer" you get should have a larger diameter/size than the area under the nut or bolt head, NOT a thin tube.
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#54
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
On Wednesday, July 20, 2016 at 10:31:52 PM UTC-4, Dave Springford wrote:
Hi Tom, Very doubtful that the nut came off from vibration. Nylock nuts are used and they are not prone to this. My trailer is towed behind a motorhome with a large axle to tow ball distance resulting a bending moment on the tongue and shear load on the (front) bolt (in particular). After my post, another motorhome owner checked his trailer and found that the same bolt on his trailer was broken - shear plane through the threads, bad design - but fortunately the rest of the bolt was still in the tongue so he was able to take pictures of it. It was certainly a failure due to shear. I question why AL-KO switched from 1000 MPa bolts to 800 MPa bolts at some point. I checked several other older trailers than mine and they all had 10.9 bolts. Mine had 8.8, as did the other trailer that failed. Rather than put a lot of time into the bolt specification, why not "simply" drill the holes out to 5/8" and get 50% more strength? I'm going to look at doing that on mine. UH |
#55
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
Uli,
Use of bearing vs. friction for bolts in shear depends on which industry you're operating in. For building structures it's quite common to use bolts in bearing since often the loads are relatively static. Friction bolting is advantageous in applications where the loads are cyclic and fatigue is a concern. It's also advantageous for applications that require accommodation of loose field tolerances since the bolts can be tightened to clamping friction and the bolt holes can be oversize or slotted. I agree the ALKO tongue connection is subject to cyclic loads and fatigue and would benefit from a properly installed friction bolted connection. A compression bushing between the inside walls of the square tube is needed to develop the proper clamping force. Drilling a larger hole for a bushing and pushing it through the square tube won't accomplish the goal. Craig 7Q Hi Craig - point taken! I didn't even think about static applications. I designed mining and tunneling machines and now I engineer around wind turbines. Think high vibrations and dynamics in both cases, so in my world, stuff is constantly trying to fall apart while I desperately try to keep it together - with bolts as long and tightly torqued as the materials allow ;-) Uli AS |
#56
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
On 21/07/2016 18:35, Craig Funston wrote:
Use of bearing vs. friction for bolts in shear depends on which industry you're operating in. For building structures it's quite common to use bolts in bearing since often the loads are relatively static. Friction bolting is advantageous in applications where the loads are cyclic and fatigue is a concern. It's also advantageous for applications that require accommodation of loose field tolerances since the bolts can be tightened to clamping friction and the bolt holes can be oversize or slotted. I agree the ALKO tongue connection is subject to cyclic loads and fatigue and would benefit from a properly installed friction bolted connection. A compression bushing between the inside walls of the square tube is needed to develop the proper clamping force. Drilling a larger hole for a bushing and pushing it through the square tube won't accomplish the goal. From my understanding of bolted joints, cyclic shear loads can induce fatigue failure and using a higher strength steel is not going to prevent fatigue. I suspect the designers underestimated the number and magnitude of the fatigue cycles these trailers are subject to when towed behind motor homes. Note I have not looked at one of these in person to know if these suggestions are practical. But I would look for a simpler fix: - Drill out the 12mm bolts and fit 16mm bolts, and make the problem "go away" for a long time, hopefully forever. or - Drill additional holes for 2 extra 12 mm bolts, one adjacent to each of the existing ones. Then fit two extra bolts, but with one head of each pair of bolts on opposite sides of the trailer. Biggest advantage of this is there are now four bolts and any 3 will easily carry the load. So if you check it once in a while and find a bolt missing or damaged, you will have ample chance to replace it and check the other 3, before things deteriorate to a point of potential catastrophic failure. In reality the redundant bolts will probably not take any load, but hopefully with pairs of bolts fitted from opposing sides, their will be an un-threaded portion bolt to take the load in each major shear plane. Ian |
#57
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
As an ignorant non-engineer why not reduce the cause of the problem
rather than use a technical solution to it. As I understand it the problem seams to be caused by excessive pitching of the trailer exceeding the design loads on the tongue. What caused this pitching? One thing mentioned it is large overhangs between the rear axle and the hitch on the tow vehicle. If this is sufficient to cause problems with the integrity of the tongue what is it doing to the glider inside? Another problem is loading the trailer so there is too much weight on the tongue. The pitching causes a loading + or _ around that weight. i.e if the tongue weight is 30lb and pitching causes a variation of +or - 100lb the load would vary between -70 and +130. If the tongue weight was 100lb plus as I have seen recommended on this site it would vary between 0 and 200lb. Insert your own figures but you get the gist of my argument. As a matter of interest I havnt heard of this problem on this side of the pond where we usually tow with much more compact, lighter vehicles. |
#58
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
Nigel Pocock wrote on 7/22/2016 8:32 AM:
As an ignorant non-engineer why not reduce the cause of the problem rather than use a technical solution to it. As I understand it the problem seams to be caused by excessive pitching of the trailer exceeding the design loads on the tongue. What caused this pitching? One thing mentioned it is large overhangs between the rear axle and the hitch on the tow vehicle. If this is sufficient to cause problems with the integrity of the tongue what is it doing to the glider inside? Another problem is loading the trailer so there is too much weight on the tongue. The pitching causes a loading + or _ around that weight. i.e if the tongue weight is 30lb and pitching causes a variation of +or - 100lb the load would vary between -70 and +130. If the tongue weight was 100lb plus as I have seen recommended on this site it would vary between 0 and 200lb. Insert your own figures but you get the gist of my argument. As a matter of interest I havnt heard of this problem on this side of the pond where we usually tow with much more compact, lighter vehicles. Changing to a more trailer-friendly towing vehicle than a motorhome is a non-starter if I want my wife to travel with me; I also prefer traveling (particularly to glider events) in a motorhome. It does happen on your side of the pond when towing with motorhomes, but likely isn't as common due to fewer towing miles and smaller motorhomes. I've towed my ASH 26 E more than 170,000 miles in it's Cobra trailer, and it's in fine shape, so the pitching doesn't seem to be a problem for the glider. I did have to replace the original, smaller tongue about 15 years ago, which developed a crack at the weld for the tongue wheel mount. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Dec 2014a" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://soaringsafety.org/prevention/...anes-2014A.pdf |
#59
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
On Thursday, July 21, 2016 at 6:42:04 PM UTC-7, AS wrote:
Uli, Use of bearing vs. friction for bolts in shear depends on which industry you're operating in. For building structures it's quite common to use bolts in bearing since often the loads are relatively static. Friction bolting is advantageous in applications where the loads are cyclic and fatigue is a concern. It's also advantageous for applications that require accommodation of loose field tolerances since the bolts can be tightened to clamping friction and the bolt holes can be oversize or slotted. I agree the ALKO tongue connection is subject to cyclic loads and fatigue and would benefit from a properly installed friction bolted connection. A compression bushing between the inside walls of the square tube is needed to develop the proper clamping force. Drilling a larger hole for a bushing and pushing it through the square tube won't accomplish the goal. Craig 7Q Hi Craig - point taken! I didn't even think about static applications. I designed mining and tunneling machines and now I engineer around wind turbines. Think high vibrations and dynamics in both cases, so in my world, stuff is constantly trying to fall apart while I desperately try to keep it together - with bolts as long and tightly torqued as the materials allow ;-) Uli AS Hi Uli, I can absolutely see why clamping force is king. Lots of other things to consider as well I'm sure. I remember being fascinated by the use of tapered studs to control shear lag / bond stresses in the bonded steel fasteners for the FRP blades. Interesting industry. Cheers, Craig 7Q |
#60
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Al-Ko Trailer Tongue failure
On Thursday, July 7, 2016 at 9:21:28 PM UTC-4, Karl Striedieck wrote:
My first Duo trailer showed signs of those two cross bolts working, so I drilled a 1/2" hole vertically in that area and installed a grade 8 bolt to hold everything tight. No working thereafter. I'll so same with replacement Duo/trailer. Piet Barber has that rig now and he might share pics? I took some pictures of this on Saturday, hope they help the discussion a bit: https://sites.google.com/a/pietbarbe...a-modification |
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