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 Post subject: Rivets and Rivnuts 101
PostPosted: May 11, 2010, 9:00 am 
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Riveting and Rivnuts 101
Riveting
The Locost builder has two basic types of rivets to choose from. The two types are the pull through type mandrel rivet that leaves just a hollow rivet sleeve to carry the load and the structural rivet that leaves the mandrel in the center of the rivet. One should never consider using the pull through type mandrel type rivet. For higher strength applications we need to use steel body rivets for installations like floor pan and the non-structural such as in a dash panel or pedal box we can use the common aluminum rivet. The side panels will be carrying a load but will not be as highly stressed as a floor pan so a good quality aluminum rivet will suffice. Structural and non-structural rivets used in a locost build will probably be the blind rivet type. Most Locost riveting will be 1/8” diameter rivets. The structural 1/8” rivets should be rated at 500 pounds or greater shear strength and should be plated steel or stainless steel. A high cost option would be the CherryMax or Huck which has both steel and aluminum sleeve structural rivets. You also typically have two types of mandrels for structural rivets either a non-break or break. The non-break will require that the mandrel be trimmed then dressed flush after setting the rivet. Most riveting on a Locost can be the standard aluminum pop type that has a 200-300 pounds shear strength depending on the aluminum alloy of the rivet. If one plans on racing then one should consider steel rivets on the major shear planes such as the cockpit sides, fire wall and seat back panels. Rivet installation holes are slightly larger then the rivets. The Rivet actually expands into the hole. The correct hole diameter for a 1/8 (.125”) rivet is a number 30 drill that is a .128-129” Diameter. The final drilled diameter size is very important and one should avoid drilling oversized holes. Probably the best technique is to drill the hole with a standard 1/8 drill then after all of the pattern is drilled or punched and you have aligned the pieces with cleco’s, then go back and redrill or ream all of the holes to the final .129” diameter. If you have access to the back of the holes, one should de-burr the surface(s) after drilling the final hole size. Burrs can have a major impact on the strength of the rivet joint. The rivet should be the correct grip length relative to the thickness of the jointing material(s) and the rivet should never be set closer to the edge of the material then two times the diameter of the rivet and the spacing should not be less then 3 times the diameter of the rivet. Rivet spacing on a locost will depend on the stress load anticipated and will typical be 1” to 2” center to center distant with higher stressed areas having a closer pattern to add to the structural capabilities.
If you are riveting fiber glass, you should use a backer plate or back up washers under the rivet. There also special large headed rivets that are an excellent choice for Fiber glass or thin gauge aluminum. Check McMaster-Carr, they sell these specialized rivets in counts of 50 per pack. Some builders drip their rivets in a urethane adhesive to help seal up the tubing. Be aware that this can turn real messy and will gum up your hands or air/hydraulic riveter. If you go this route, then soak the rivet gun head after use in lacquer thinner. After cleaning the rivet gun, lube all of the heads mechanical linkage parts accept the actual gripping jaws. Finally do not buy your rivets at the local hardware store. You are better off buying one box of a 1,000 band name rivets, Vs several buys of 200 at a time, because you will probably use at a very minimum of around 600 rivets and a couple more 50 count bags of long grip rivets.
If you have to remove a rivet. Make a drill stop “a piece of tube fitted over the drill bit” that just drills to the depth of the rivet head. You can then remove the head and then just knot the rivet sleeve thru the back side, this way you still end up with the correct hole size for re-installing the replacement rivet. If there is access, you should support the back side of the panel with a bucking bar before carefully driving out the shank. If you do damage the panel holes, you can increase the rivet size from 1/8 up to a 5/32” diameter rivet.

Rivnuts
Rivnuts and Rivstuds are also blind fasteners like rivets, but with either internal threads or an external threaded stud. They provide a strong fastening method for panels or for attachment to the thin wall frame tubes. First the rivnuts that you get at the local hardware store will NOT work; they are made of soft aluminum and will not carry but the lightest of loads, and are only acceptable for such things as an access panel, or wiring P-clips, etc. You will need to get rivnuts that are made of steel for the mounting of any heavy loaded attachments like fenders or other accessory brackets. To prevent the rivnut from twisting they must have a locking tab on the underside of the head, or serrations on the sleeve or head. Bollhoff makes a rivnut “wedgehead” that has serrations on both the sleeve and underside of the head. The Bollhoff will not twist or turn if installed correctly. [I highly recommended the Bollhoff] I would avoid the aircraft style rivnuts that have a locking tab on the underside of the head. These rivnuts are designed to have the hole punched into the sheet with a key slot designed into the punching process to prevent rotation. The key slot can be filed in by hand but it is PITA.
Just like the rivets, you will need to carefully drill the correct size hole, but the size will vary depending on the actual rivnut supplier. Again the back side of the panel should be de-burred if at all possible. This is even more important with a rivnut. Rivnuts installed correctly can carry structural loads and typically a single length size can be used for several different grip ranges. The best suppliers for rivnuts made of steel, Textron, Bollhoff, B.F. Goodrich, and PennEnigineering.
Most of the hand rivnut installation tools are only useful for setting aluminum rivnuts that you will only be using for non-structural applications and in limited numbers. Structural applications MUST be steel rivnuts and are typically up set with either an air or electric installation rivnut gun. For the Locost builder I have found that using a piece of angle Iron as a fixture plate that you can hold with a small crescent wrench to prevent it from turning as you tighten the rivnut down with a grade 8 bolt is the best installation approach. The angle Iron plate fixture can be drilled with the various bolt diameters for the sizes of rivnuts that you will be using. Place the bolt thru the correct whole size with a couple washers lightly lubed under the bolt head. Place the rivnut on the underside the angle iron plate and then insert the rivnut into the tube or sheet. Then just tight the bolt into the rivnut, while holding the angle Iron fixture until the rivnut gripes the panel.
If the rivnut is being installed in light gauge aluminum panel, as is typical for mounting a fender, it is a good idea to install a back up washer or plate on the under side of the rivnut to help distribute the load over a larger area.
One word of caution, DO NOT use rivnuts for electrical grounds, because overtime an oxide will form between the aluminum sheet and the rivnut. You need to tap directly into steel for all of your electrical grounds.

Tools you will need for rivets and rivnuts
1. Cleco’s: an expanding temporary fastener [25-50 req’d]
2. Hand riveter, preferably with good lever ratio.
3. Rivet guide; made from a plate of steel with layed out hole patterns and with various edge distances.
4. Pancake or Aircraft type 90* threaded drill adaptor
5. Hand chamfering tool for deburring [or a drill bit]
If you have a push drill a reamer or a dull drill bit will be-burr a whole panel of 1/8 holes in short order.
6. Standard measuring tools for marking and laying out odd
size rivet patterns. If you have to repeat a rivet pattern, try making a template out of clear plastic that has small locating holes for your center punch.

Optional tools
7. Air over hydraulic riveter. Highly recommended, because you can hold the rivet head tightly against the matl.
8. Cleco side clamps. [5 or more]
9. Carbide Vs tool steel threaded drill bits.
10. Whitney Roper hand punch, limited by throat length.
11. Rivet buck, a block with various rivet hole Dia’s.
12. Rivet fan, and hided hole jig [you can make these]
13. A Tee handle with a sharp pointed drill to help align
panels and to ream slightly miss-aligned rivet holes.
14. Hand Rivnut installation tool, for small aluminum only.

I've added some photos of both rivets and riv-nuts, plus the tools you will find helpful in the fabrication process.
Dave W


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Last edited by davew on February 5, 2012, 11:51 am, edited 2 times in total.

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PostPosted: May 11, 2010, 9:53 am 
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Mcmaster has the best deal on a quality rivet nut tool for smaller sizes. i have their Marson bearing pivot tool, and all the metric and SAE sizes in small tackle box style craft organizers by size including hardware in stainless button head with std and fender washers with std nuts and nyloc nuts all in stainless steel. costly the first time, but i did it size by size and ordered small bags of each to get started. now that i'm stock piled, it's so nice to reach and have what you used to wish for.


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PostPosted: May 12, 2010, 6:03 am 
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Very nicely written, thanks for posting up the info :cheers: :cheers:

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PostPosted: May 12, 2010, 8:20 am 
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Is there a way to de-burr the blind holes in the frame tubes? If not, then drilling technique would be important to reduce burring.

1. drill at 90 degrees

2. drill slowly (not drill rpm, but don't use excessive pressure)

3. use a sharp bit.

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PostPosted: May 12, 2010, 8:36 am 
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You can use a tool like This to do blind holes

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PostPosted: May 12, 2010, 9:21 am 
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RacerDan wrote:
Is there a way to de-burr the blind holes in the frame tubes?

Yes, but don't bother. We use so many rivets in a rather non-structural way, it's just not worth the many hours you'd need to clean them all up.

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PostPosted: May 13, 2010, 12:32 am 
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Sticky-fied! Thanks Dave, excellent writeup. :)

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PostPosted: February 18, 2011, 7:06 pm 
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davew wrote:
For the Locost builder I have found that using a piece of angle Iron as a fixture plate that you can hold with a small crescent wrench to prevent it from turning as you tighten the rivnut down with a grade 8 bolt is the best installation approach. The angle Iron plate fixture can be drilled with the various bolt diameters for the sizes of rivnuts that you will be using. Place the bolt thru the correct whole size with a couple washers lightly lubed under the bolt head. Place the rivnut on the underside the angle iron plate and then insert the rivnut into the tube or sheet. Then just tight the bolt into the rivnut, while holding the angle Iron fixture until the rivnut gripes the panel.


Nice article! I agree on buying the good quality hardware, particularly for rivets and rivnuts and setting tools.

This technique works well for a small number of rivnuts. Continuous use of a fixture like this will wear and cause dimples in the angle and the rivnut will be allowed to rotate when you tighten down on it so expect to have to redrill the holes from time to time. Ask me how I found this out ... :D

The commercial rivnut setters have hardened collars that do not wear. I have the Marson rivnut setting tool which looks like a pop rivet setter and works without turning a bolt inside the rivnut as you're setting it so it doesn't try and force the rivnut to turn. There are several different types of setting tools, some you could replicate yourself easily.

There's another thing to consider when using rivnuts and that is removing them. Without knowing a technique/trick or two it can turn into a tool throwing nightmare, but you have to expect that the inside part of the rivnut will stay in the tube it was attached to and may rattle.

You will have to do this at some stage due to threads being stripped or the rivnut loosening and turning in the hole. Removal is simple, just use a good sized counter sink and get after it until the inner 'corner' of the outside flange wears away and then hit the rivnut with a hammer and punch and it'll be gone. If the rivnut rotates then you can use some superglue which will capillary under the external flange to hold it down while you reset it or cut it out as above.

-Steve

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PostPosted: February 18, 2011, 10:34 pm 
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Thank you, your timing is perfect as I am about to install rivnuts and the information is very helpful.
In case you are looking for a good supply for special fasteners, check out: http://www.yardstore.com/

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PostPosted: March 6, 2011, 4:26 pm 
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ACTUALLY

while the concept of "deburring" for Rivnuts sounds marvelous...

in actuality, the manufacturers recommend NOT deburring your holes...
the burrs actually HELP keep the rivnuts from twisting in the hole...

go figure


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PostPosted: October 17, 2011, 9:35 pm 
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I only need to set about 6 rivnuts and don't want to fork out for an expensive tool. Is it possible to set stainless steel rivnuts (M4/M5) by hand using a grade 9 bolt and nut?


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PostPosted: October 18, 2011, 8:35 am 
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fenis
All you really need is a flat section of steel with a hole large enough to put the bolt thru and into the riv-nut. insert the riv-nut into the hole and add a little lube on the bolt head and washer then troque up the bolt.
Dave W


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PostPosted: October 18, 2011, 8:49 am 
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Here you go. http://www.fjr1300.info/howto/rivnut-tool.html

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PostPosted: January 11, 2018, 3:17 pm 
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Is there a problem about using aluminum rivets into a steel frame?


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PostPosted: January 11, 2018, 3:27 pm 
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Short answer, probably not.

The longer answer is: It depends how much you want to worry about electrolysis due to the differing metals, where you live (the weather and humidity), and if you plan to drive in the wet. It's not a yes/no question because even in the worst case, it'll take years for it to become a problem, decades if you keep it dry. Whether that's an issue is up to you.

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