I am guessing your shear bolts are grade 8 and they have a grove cut in the shank of the bolt where that are suppose to break.
I agree with jix about using a cheap grade bolt.
I've even gone with cheap bolts that had threads the full bolt length, so when the bolt broke it would break at a thread part of the bolt rather than at an unthreaded part.
Thinking that the cut of the threads would make the bolt slightly weaker compared to a bolt that is only threaded partially up the bolt shank.
Most carriage bolts I've seen are threaded full length, and I've used carriage bolt for shear bolts, and yes they will break.
Problem with a carriage bolt is that the head of the bolt is round and requires a pair of pliers to grip the head rather than a wrench.
I buy my cheap carriage bolts by the pound at TractorSupplyCompany. I believe they are grade 5.
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I agree with jix about using a cheap grade bolt.
I've even gone with cheap bolts that had threads the full bolt length, so when the bolt broke it would break at a thread part of the bolt rather than at an unthreaded part.
Thinking that the cut of the threads would make the bolt slightly weaker compared to a bolt that is only threaded partially up the bolt shank.
Most carriage bolts I've seen are threaded full length, and I've used carriage bolt for shear bolts, and yes they will break.
Problem with a carriage bolt is that the head of the bolt is round and requires a pair of pliers to grip the head rather than a wrench.
I buy my cheap carriage bolts by the pound at TractorSupplyCompany. I believe they are grade 5.
.