Brysherexx
New Member
Is it acceptable when the castle nut is torqued to specs but goes past the cotter pin hole to back it off, insert washers, retorque, then insert cotter pin?
I’ve done it before. Wether it’s acceptable could be up for discussion.Is it acceptable when the castle nut is torqued to specs but goes past the cotter pin hole to back it off, insert washers, retorque, then insert cotter pin?
Sneaks up fast huh 😂I did it once when I reamed a knuckle a tad too deep. I’m sure it’s probably not kosher, but it held up fine for me.
I think he’s saying that when the nut is tightened, it is not tall enough that putting a cotter pin in the hole does anything because the top of the nut is past the hole.Any official docs (factory service manuals or similar) I've ever read about castle nut torque will tell you to torque to spec, then continue to tighten until you can get the cotter pin through.
In that scenario I'd say stacked washers is probably acceptable, but certainly not ideal. Like you mentioned, I think a taller nut would be a better solution. You could also re-drill the cotter pin hole in a usable spot. Hell, you could run a second castle nut on upside down (so the castle tops face each other) and cotter pin it in place too I guess.Like this
View attachment 155931
What I was going to say, and probably the right solution.Another option is I think you can find taller(longer) castle nuts