Righty tighty lefty loosey

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Technique: Righty tighty lefty loosey


ReusabilityReversible
Tools: Wrenches, Screw drivers
Parts: Bolts, Nuts

Introduction

By common convention, right-handedness is the default handedness for screw threads. Therefore, most threaded parts and fasteners have right-handed threads.

Challenges

Left-handed thread applications include:

  • Where the rotation of a shaft would cause a conventional right-handed nut to loosen rather than to tighten due to applied torque or to fretting induced precession. Examples include:
    • The left hand pedal on bicycles.
    • The left-hand grinding wheel on bench grinders.
    • The axle nuts, or less commonly, lug nuts on the left side of some automobiles.
    • The securing nut on some circular saw blades – the large torque at startup should tend to tighten the nut.
    • The spindle on brushcutter and line trimmer heads, so that the torque tends to tighten rather than loosen the connection
  • In combination with right-hand threads in turnbuckles and clamping studs.
  • In some gas supply connections to prevent dangerous misconnections, for example:
    • In gas welding the flammable gas supply uses left-handed threads, while the oxygen supply if there is one has a conventional thread
    • The POL valve for LPG cylinders
  • In a situation where neither threaded pipe end can be rotated to tighten or loosen the joint (e.g. in traditional heating pipes running through several rooms in a building). In such a case, the coupling will have one right-handed and one left-handed thread.
  • In some instances, for example early ballpoint pens, to provide a "secret" method of disassembly.
  • In artillery projectiles, anything that screws into the projectile must be given consideration as to what will happen when the projectile is fired, e.g., anything that screws into the base from the bottom of the projectile must be left hand threaded.
  • In mechanisms to give a more intuitive action as:
    • The leadscrew of the cross slide of a lathe to cause the cross slide to move away from the operator when the leadscrew is turned clockwise.
    • The depth of cut screw of a "Bailey" (or "Stanley-Bailey") type metal plane (tool) for the blade to move in the direction of a regulating right hand finger.
  • Some Edison base lamps and fittings (such as those formerly used on the New York City Subway or the pre-World War I Sprague-Thomson rolling stock of the Paris Metro) have a left-hand thread to deter theft, since they cannot be used in other light fixtures.

Approaches

Used to recall the direction a standard screw, bolt, or nut must turn to either tighten or loosen, right meaning clockwise and left counterclockwise.

References