by mike » Wed May 28, 2008 5:24 pm
Spinning hangers wouldn't matter- the bolts are tightened to each other, rather than compressing the hanger to the rock.
As for mushrooming the heads weakening the steel... maybe a little- certainly not very much. Welding of mushrooms could be done with 1/16" 316L rods... just a small tack- enough to stop the threads from functioning would be fine. Busting up the threads with a sharp blow from a chisel, before installation, would do the same trick too- if the nuts can't turn themselves off the pins then the hangers can't get off the pins either.
I figure that the nut which caused this entire thread was spun off by rope drag... after it was loostened by some mysterious force. The outside diameter of the nut is around 1cm (3.14D=circumference) so the circumference of the nut is ~3mm- that means that the total amount of rope required to spin a nut off of say 10 full threads is only 31.416cm... or in laymens terms 1 foot.
The key, in my mind, to good anchors is not torque value- due to the environment, impact forces applied, and just the nature of the beast- things change. Torque values get things correct in the first place- but can quickly be thrown out of wack.
The key to good anchors is keeping the nuts on the pins, and keeping the everything fairly snug and tight.
on another note, I think if the anchor that MEC is now selling, which Murph mentioned, had a KBII type anchor system rather than it's current pound-in-to-set arrangement, with something like an 8cm long pin, that it would be cat's ass.
Mike