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Cost Justification & Reliability Benefits of
Multi-Jackbolt Tensioners

Written by Allan Steinbock, VP of Superbolt, Inc.

 

INTRODUCTION:

Multi-Jackbolt Tensioners are bolt tightening devices that are widely used on critical equipment in most heavy industries. Although the concept is relatively simple, these tensioners have many benefits that are not commonly known. They have proven to be economical in terms of cost and in terms of equipment reliability, which will be the focus of this paper.

DESCRIPTION OF SYSTEM:

multi-jackbolt tensionerMulti-Jackbolt Tensioners (MJT’s) come in many variations including nut style, thrust collars (unthreaded) or bolt style devices. Due to the wide variety of components available, the MJT system can be retrofitted into the same area as a standard OEM nut or bolt. This paper focuses on the nut style tensioner (Fig. 1) as this is the most commonly used. However, most of the benefits are applicable to the other designs.

The MJT system is composed of a round nut body with an internal thread identical to a standard fastener. In between the thread and the outside diameter is a series of drilled and tapped holes designed to accept hardened jackbolts that pass through the entire nut body. A hardened washer is always used under the jackbolts to protect the bearing area of the equipment (Fig. 2).

MT line drawingTo apply the system, the hardened washer is placed over the existing stud, bolt, rod or shaft to be tightened. The nut body is then threaded onto the main thread of the standard fastener hand tight against the washer. The tightening torque is applied to the individual jackbolts with a standard hand held torque wrench or air tool. Turning the jackbolts creates a thrusting of the nut body away from the washer surface, creating bolt tension and imparting a stretch on the main thread (Fig 3 & 4). MJT’s stay in place and remain on MJT cutawaythe equipment until removal for the next outage. An equivalent torque on a standard fastener can be achieved with a fraction of the torque
input. For example, to pre-stress a 4”-8tpi bolt to 45,000 psi (520,650 lb. of preload) you would need to torque a standard nut to 30,650 ft•lb. With a standard MT series MJT, the same prestress can be achieved with only 190 ft•lb on each jackbolt. Figures 5 & 6 show torque values that indicate the dramatic mechanical advantage of MJT’s compared to standard hex nut torque values.

 

how an MJT works

Since applying Multi-Jackbolt Tensioners as an alternative bolting method is new to some people, cost justification and reliability issues come to the forefront when compared to alternative or existing methods. Although many of the equipment reliability issues tie into cost justification we will attempt to discuss them separately and prove them with actual case histories.

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