This is ONLY an exercise in BAD academics. DO NOT USE THIS FOR DETERMINING THE VIABILITY OF ACTUALLY LIFTING THE ENGINE ASSY BY THE S/C.
I strongly do NOT recommend this. If Dodge does, that's their literal business, I do not know all of the factors involved, they do.
ASSUMPTIONS - AND BAD ONES AT THAT.
- That the bolt is stronger than the pull-out force of the threads (it most certainly is, but...)
- 10mm thread depth
- 8mm bolt
- threads in optimal condition, both thread percentage (75%) and overall condition.
- 270Mpa aluminum material strength (this is one of the bigger assumptions)
- thread shear efficiency factor of .577
270Mpa * .577 * 8mm * pi * 10mm = ~39,134N
39,000N / 9.8 = ~3980kg
3980kg * 2.205kg/lb = 8775lbs pullout (which is the better approach than clamp load I stated originally)
So, academically, the pullout force, per bolt is 8775lbs. BUT this is a grotesquely bad way of thinking about the system of lifting the engine assy by the the S/C.
Again, if Dodge has blessed this method, that's their deal.
.02, and a bad .02 at that!
(Did I qualify that post enough times? I did so not so much for this thread now, but in the future when somebody else stumbles onto this thread and takes it out of context.)