I really cant figure out why anybody would think 450 on a 1"+ hi strength bolt was tight. :confused2:It is possible you are over torquing them.
The bolts on my bushhog 306 (which takes a 1-11/16" socket) only have a torque spec of 450 ft-lbs.
I am guessing 950 is a tad much.
IF you have a way to measure (or guesstimate closely), use your breaker bar and cheater pipe and only apply about 100-120# of force at a distance of 48" from the center of the socket head. That should get you over 400#. and with a castle nut, that should be more than enough.
Pardon my shock/ignorance, but WTF did you come up with that procedure?
You have a driver that provides a (somewhat) known torque, and then you go to a breaker bar and wait for it to "start to give" - what exactly does that feel like, anyway?
I'd check your torque specs in the manual (or a standard chart for your hardware size) and roll with that. 950 seems way high for an application like that. $0.02
I would have to check, but aren't the blade bolts spec'd a lot lower than the center stump jumper bolt? I think that 450 figure is for the center bolt.
I would have to check, but aren't the blade bolts spec'd a lot lower than the center stump jumper bolt? I think that 450 figure is for the center bolt.
The joint is made by a shoulder bolt seating in a fitted socket. Joints can move. If they move they wear and get loos[er] without the nut turning. All parts in a joint that wear are then damaged and consequently less sutable for their purpose. Ample tightness will keep the joint from moving.Why do you want them so tight?
Yes, with a lock washer, you need it tightened down. But with a castle nut and cotter pin, I would think that the last hole you can reasonably access would be fine. The blades are supposed to swing freely.