Spyke
lemmy.world

What a remarkable bolt! Can it come and do my place when it's finished?

154

Hello from the future! Don't mind me, just following a chain of Lemmy switcheroos.

4

ive seen these used sticking out of concrete, the bend acting as the anchor... then the wood is bolted to this.

47

J Bolts for concrete don't have a head on them. The bent part is embedded into the concrete and would never be turned. Forming a hex head would be a wasted extra production cost.

24
Tandybaumreply
lemmy.world

I could see but it seems like a washer would be a much easier way to do this rather than bending like that

3
over_cloxreply
lemmy.world

Even with a washer, the head of a straight bolt won't hold very well in concrete when you go trying to tighten it, it'll most likely start spinning and possibly even damage the concrete.

15

That’s true. I was thinking pull through but you’re right about spinning while tightening.

0

At my old job we had some of these on the wall for hanging our hardhats.

24

Ugh, happens to me all the time when I get overconfident trying to hammer in bolts.

24

I've had to help someone tighten a bolt like this before. It was used to attach the deck assembly to the underside of a riding lawnmower.

11

That is one of those right angle bolts for getting into tight places. Hang onto it because they cost about $15 each new. It is specially made to transfer the torque from the head around the 90 degree bend. Just line it up with the nut, slap a driver on there and go to town. I promise, it will be amazing and nothing bad will happen.

9

Could’ve been a makeshift hook. Or a lock pin/bolt (literally) for one of those simple gate latches.

7

get yourself an acyzelen torch and then you can get your very own prebent 90° bolt for thoose tight spaces

3

someone decided to be funny a couple years ago. we will never know who, but i do suspect your dad.

6

These bolts are like this from the factory - I have 4 on my honey extractor, they are used for other situations where you need to bolt one thing perpendicular to each other.

6

This is the most likely reason. I made a few of these when a regular Allen/Hex key is needed in a larger size than what you have on hand.

2

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