This part of ISO 898 specifies mechanical and physical properties of bolts, screws and studs made of carbon
steel and alloy steel when tested at an ambient temperature range of 10 °C to 35 °C. Fasteners (the term
used when bolts, screws and studs are considered all together) that conform to the requirements of this part of
ISO 898 are evaluated at that ambient temperature range. They might not retain the specified mechanical and
physical properties at elevated temperatures (see Annex B) and/or lower temperatures.
NOTE 1 Fasteners conforming to the requirements of this part of ISO 898 are used in applications ranging from −50 °C
to +150 °C. Users are advised to consult an experienced fastener metallurgist for temperatures outside the range of
−50 °C to +150 °C and up to a maximum temperature of +300 °C when determining appropriate choices for a given
application.
NOTE 2 Information for the selection and application of steels for use at lower and elevated temperatures is given, for
example, in EN 10269, ASTM F2281 and in ASTM A320/A320M.
Certain bolts and screws might not fulfil the tensile or torsional requirements of this part of ISO 898 because
the geometry of their heads reduces the shear area in the head compared to the stress area in the thread.
These include bolts and screws having a low or countersunk head (see 8.2).
This part of ISO 898 is applicable to bolts, screws and studs
⎯ made of carbon steel or alloy steel,
⎯ having triangular ISO metric screw thread in accordance with ISO 68-1,
⎯ with coarse pitch thread M1,6 to M39, and fine pitch thread M8×1 to M39×3,
⎯ with diameter/pitch combinations in accordance with ISO 261 and ISO 262, and
⎯ having thread tolerances in accordance with ISO 965-1, ISO 965-2 and ISO 965-4.
It is not applicable to set screws and similar threaded fasteners not under tensile stress (see ISO 898-5).
It does not specify requirements for such properties as
⎯ weldability,
⎯ corrosion resistance,
⎯ resistance to shear stress,
⎯ torque/clamp force performance (for test method, see ISO 16047), or
⎯ fatigue resistance.
Required fields are indicated with *