Relationship between clamp force and pull-out strength in lag screw timber joints

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Abstract

This study empirically examines the relationship between clamp force and pull-out strength in lag screw joints of timber members, using data obtained in tightening tests and pull-out tests. Maximum clamp force per unit screw length as determined from the tightening tests was lower than the lower bound for the 95% tolerance range for pull-out strength per unit screw length as determined from the pull-out tests. Moreover, X-ray CT (computed tomography) observations of anchor members from both tests revealed that failure behavior clearly differed between the tightening test and the pull-out test: tightening caused damage to the wooden, female thread in addition to major splitting damage in the wood perpendicular to the grain near the tip of the lag screw.

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Matsubara, D., Wakashima, Y., Fujisawa, Y., Shimizu, H., Kitamori, A., & Ishikawa, K. (2017). Relationship between clamp force and pull-out strength in lag screw timber joints. Journal of Wood Science, 63(6), 625–634. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10086-017-1660-1

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