Originally Posted By: Merkava_4
Originally Posted By: BRZED
A for Loctite being used as a thread protectant, yes, I can see that, too.
I don't think it prevents against galling near as well as anti-seize does. And by "galling," I mean scraping, abrading, tearing, bending, chipping, misaligning, or in general - wearing away the threads of a fastener. I believe it's in my best interest to decrease friction to the threads of a fastener, not increase it.
Most of it is all in your head and the OCD prevents you from thinking logically. I live in a rust belt and have never galled, tore, chipped or bent the threads that were cleaned of course.
And threaded fasteners do need friction to set the tension and hold it. Your OCD and lack of any engineering related training creates solutions to problems that simply do not exist. In fact your solutions may cause problems.
Originally Posted By: BRZED
A for Loctite being used as a thread protectant, yes, I can see that, too.
I don't think it prevents against galling near as well as anti-seize does. And by "galling," I mean scraping, abrading, tearing, bending, chipping, misaligning, or in general - wearing away the threads of a fastener. I believe it's in my best interest to decrease friction to the threads of a fastener, not increase it.
Most of it is all in your head and the OCD prevents you from thinking logically. I live in a rust belt and have never galled, tore, chipped or bent the threads that were cleaned of course.
And threaded fasteners do need friction to set the tension and hold it. Your OCD and lack of any engineering related training creates solutions to problems that simply do not exist. In fact your solutions may cause problems.