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Palgotta Metal Industries Work synonyms of quality product. We also work on
special requirement of ST. ST. Fasteners and
deliver on timeBolts are used with nuts and
often with washers. The three basic types are carriage
bolts, stove bolts, and machine bolts. Other types include the masonry bolt and
anchor, toggle bolt, and expansion bolt, which are used to distribute weight
when fastening something to a hollow wall. Machine bolts are manufactured in
two gauges: fine-threaded and coarse. Carriage and stove bolts are
coarse-threaded. Bolt size is measured by shank diameter and by threads per
inch, expressed as diameter by threads (for example, 1/4X20). Carriage bolts
are available up to 10 inches long, stove bolts up to 6 inches, and machine
bolts up to 30 inches. Larger sizes usually must be special ordered. Carriage bolts
are used mainly in making furniture. They have a round head with a square
collar and are tightened into place with a nut and wrench. The collar fits into
a prebored hole or twists into the wood, preventing the bolt from turning as
the nut is tightened. Carriage bolts are coarse-threaded and are available in
diameters from 3⁄16 to 3/4 inch and lengths from 1/2 inch to 10 inches. Stove bolts aren't
just for stoves; they are quite versatile and can be used for almost any
fastening job. They are available in a wide range of sizes, have a slotted head
-- flat, oval, or round, like screws --
and are driven with a screwdriver or tightened into place with a nut and
wrench. Most stove bolts are completely threaded, but the larger ones may have
a smooth shank near the bolt head. Stove bolts are coarse-threaded and are
available in diameters from 5⁄32 to 1/2 inch and lengths from 3/8 inch to 6
inches. Machine bolts have either a square head or a hexagonal head. They are fastened
with square nuts or hex nuts and are wrench-driven. Machine bolts are
manufactured in very large sizes; the bolt diameter increases with length. They
are either coarse-threaded or fine-threaded and are available in diameters from
1/4 inch to 2 inches and lengths from 1/4 inch to 30 inches. These work on the
same principle as the lag bolt or screw; a plastic sleeve expands inside a
predrilled hole as the bolt is tightened. Toggle bolts and expansion bolts are
used for fastening lightweight objects, such as picture frames, to hollow
walls. Toggle bolt wings are opened inside the wall by a spring. Expansion
bolts are inserted into an expansion jacket, which expands as the bolt is
tightened. The bolts are available in diameters from 1/8 to 1/2 inch and lengths
up to 8 inches for walls as thick as 13/4 inches. In climbing, a bolt is a
permanent anchor fixed into a hole drilled in the rock, usually consisting of a
glued in or expansion bolt. There are two main types of bolt placements: bolt
hangers and bolt runners. Bolt hangers consist of a bolt that permanently fixes
a hanger to the rockface. Bolt runners (often simply referred to as just
'bolts') consist solely of a bolt placed with the bolt head sticking out
slightly from the rockface, requiring climbers to clip on bolt plates that they
bring up with them. Once the boltplate is in position it functions very much
like a bolt hanger. Passing climbers then clip a quickdraw to the bolt hanger
or bolt plate. The rope is then clipped into the free end of the quickdraw to
protect the climber against a fall. Bolts are also used in aid climbing - the
distinction being that bolts are used to actively aid ascent in aid climbing,
whereas sport climbing uses bolts as a backup to catch a fall. The distinction
between aid climbing and sport climbing becomes blurred in that sports climbers
will deliberatly, and quite often, stop and rest on the next convenient bolt.