Can an Allen Wrench Withstand Maximum Force Before Breaking?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the maximum force that an Allen wrench can withstand before failing, focusing on the relationship between tensile strength and failure modes such as bending, yielding, and breaking. Participants explore various factors affecting the performance of Allen wrenches in practical applications, particularly in automotive contexts.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested
  • Experimental/applied

Main Points Raised

  • One participant inquires about an equation relating tensile strength to maximum force on an Allen wrench.
  • Another participant questions the loading direction and suggests that bending or yielding may occur before breaking, raising the issue of what constitutes failure.
  • Discussion includes anecdotal evidence that lower-quality hex keys may bend, while higher-quality brands might withstand more force depending on prior usage.
  • A participant presents a bending stress equation, indicating a technical approach to understanding the forces involved.
  • Several participants share personal experiences of breaking Allen wrenches, noting that fractures often occur without significant bending and typically near the base or the L-shape of the wrench.
  • One participant mentions that smaller wrenches tend to strip fasteners rather than break, while larger wrenches may require additional force to loosen fasteners, which can lead to wrench failure.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of experiences and opinions regarding the failure modes of Allen wrenches, with no clear consensus on the maximum force they can withstand or the conditions leading to failure.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the lack of specific definitions for failure modes, variations in wrench quality, and the influence of prior usage on performance. The discussion does not resolve the mathematical aspects of force application or the precise conditions under which failure occurs.

taylorbrown96
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Hello, I was wondering if anyone here knew of (or could come up with) an equation relating the tensile strength and the maximum force that could be applied to an allen wrench? Any help is appreciated.
 
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What direction do you want to load the wrench? A picture of your intended test/application set up would help make your question more clear.

In general, I think you will find that the wrench will bend/yield long before it breaks. Does that count as a failure, or are you only concerned with breaking into two parts?
 
OldEngr63 said:
bend/yield long before it breaks
"Bargain bin" hex keys will; honest "Allen" brand? Depends on how much "shock" loading they've endured from impact drivers.
 
i broke a lot of them over the years. when working on rusted old automobiles, pretty common. they snap before they ever take a bend and retain the bend usually.
 
Ranger, I think this is fundamental your experience. Where was usually the position of the fracture ?
 
I have seen them all. Bends, breaks, twists, etc. On set screws the screw usually splits before the wrench is damaged.
 
usually the small ones break...and the fracture is close to the L , i have twisted a 1/2" (13mm) allen wrench..used a pipe to try to break loose an allen plug
 
I have always found the smaller fractional < 3/8" will strip the fastener before breaking a wrench.
When using the larger internal socket hex wrenches, it will sometimes need a "cheater / persuader / logic modifier" to loosen the fastener and that is what will break the wrench, but after using them for 30 yrs, I haven't broken many at all.
 

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