Fretting wear in bolted joints is a common problem in machinery, vehicles, wind power equipment, rail systems, pumps, compressors, and vibrating steel structures. It usually appears where two clamped surfaces move slightly against each other under load. The movement is small, but the damage can grow over time.
At first, fretting may look like dark powder, reddish-brown debris, polished metal, small pits, or surface scars around the bolt hole, washer face, or joint interface. If the cause is not corrected, it can lead to preload loss, fatigue cracking, bolt loosening, surface damage, and early joint failure.
For high-strength bolts, washers, and coated fasteners used in demanding assemblies, buyers can review XZ Fastener’s high strength fasteners, washers, and various coated fasteners pages.
What Is Fretting Wear?
Small movement, repeated damage
Fretting wear occurs when two contact surfaces experience repeated micro-sliding. The movement may be only a few microns, but it is enough to damage the surface film and produce wear debris.
In bolted joints, this often happens when the clamp force is not enough to prevent movement between the connected parts.
| Fretting Location | Common Sign | Possible Result |
|---|---|---|
| Under bolt head | Polished ring, dark debris | Preload loss |
| Under washer | Surface scoring or rust powder | Bearing surface damage |
| Around bolt hole | Oval wear marks | Joint slip |
| Between plates | Dark powder or local pitting | Fatigue crack initiation |
| Thread contact area | Wear or galling | Assembly difficulty or loosening |
Fretting is not the same as normal corrosion. It is a combined wear and oxidation process caused by repeated small movement.
Why Fretting Happens in Bolted Joints
The joint is moving when it should not
A properly designed bolted joint should keep the clamped parts from sliding under service load. When external vibration, shear load, thermal cycling, or impact exceeds the joint’s friction capacity, micro-movement begins.
| Cause | How It Leads to Fretting |
|---|---|
| Low preload | Clamped parts can slip |
| Poor torque control | Clamp force varies between bolts |
| Soft washer or base material | Bearing surface embeds and preload drops |
| Short grip length | Joint is less elastic and loses preload faster |
| Vibration | Repeated transverse movement |
| Thermal cycling | Expansion and contraction reduce stability |
| Surface roughness mismatch | Local high spots wear first |
| Coating compression | Clamp force relaxes after installation |
Fretting is often blamed on the bolt, but the full joint design usually needs review.
Why Fretting Is Risky
It can start fatigue cracks
The most serious risk is not only surface wear. Fretting creates small damaged areas that can become crack initiation points. In high-cycle vibration, this can reduce fatigue life significantly.
Fretting can also mislead maintenance teams. The joint may look tight, but preload may already be reduced. A nut may still be in position while the clamped surfaces are slowly moving.
| Risk | Practical Impact |
|---|---|
| Preload loss | Joint loosening and slip |
| Surface damage | Poor contact and lower friction control |
| Fatigue cracks | Sudden failure after repeated cycles |
| Corrosion acceleration | Oxide debris and damaged coating |
| Alignment loss | Machinery vibration increases |
| Maintenance difficulty | Seized or damaged contact surfaces |
In rotating or vibrating machinery, fretting is a warning sign. It should not be ignored as a cosmetic issue.
Fastener Solutions for Fretting Control
Start with preload and joint stiffness
The best fastener solution is usually not one special part. It is a controlled fastening system.
Key controls include:
- Use the correct bolt size and grade.
- Apply the correct preload.
- Use a suitable tightening method.
- Select washers with proper hardness and bearing area.
- Avoid soft surfaces under high clamp load.
- Use locking features where vibration requires them.
- Confirm coating and lubrication effects on torque.
- Inspect the joint after initial service if the application is critical.
For material selection, XZ Fastener’s carbon steel fasteners and stainless steel fasteners pages can help buyers compare common options.
Washer and Bearing Surface Selection
The washer can make or break the joint
Washers are often overlooked in fretting problems. A soft washer may embed under load, reducing preload. A washer with poor flatness may create uneven contact. A washer that is too small may concentrate pressure.
| Washer Choice | Effect on Fretting Control |
|---|---|
| Hardened washer | Reduces embedding under high preload |
| Large OD washer | Spreads load over softer material |
| Wedge-lock washer | Helps resist vibration loosening |
| Шайба плоская | Basic bearing support |
| Spring washer | Limited support in severe vibration |
| Coated washer | Must match bolt and nut coating |
For high-strength bolted joints, washer hardness should match the bolt grade and application requirement.
Coating, Lubrication, and Surface Condition
Surface finish changes friction
Coating can reduce corrosion, but it also changes friction. Zinc plating, hot-dip galvanizing, zinc flake, Dacromet-type coatings, PTFE, black oxide, and phosphate finishes all behave differently during tightening.
If the torque value is copied from a different coating condition, preload may be too low or too high. Too low can allow joint slip. Too high can damage threads or crush the joint surface.
| Surface Condition | Fretting Concern |
|---|---|
| Dry steel | Higher friction, uncertain preload |
| Lubricated threads | Higher preload at same torque |
| PTFE coating | Low friction; torque must be verified |
| Zinc flake coating | Useful where corrosion and friction control matter |
| Горячее цинкование | Rougher surface and thread fit must be checked |
| Damaged coating | Local corrosion and wear point |
For coating references, see XZ Fastener’s PTFE coating and zinc-aluminum coating pages.
Design and Inspection Checklist
Prevent fretting before production
A fretting-resistant bolted joint should be checked before mass production or field installation.
| Check Item | Buyer or Engineer Action |
|---|---|
| Load direction | Confirm tensile, shear, or transverse vibration |
| Preload target | Define torque, angle, or tensioning method |
| Washer requirement | Specify hardness, size, and coating |
| Surface condition | Confirm coating and lubrication |
| Joint material | Check softness, paint, coating, and flatness |
| Locking method | Add lock nut, wedge washer, adhesive, or other method if needed |
| Inspection plan | Check preload, visual wear, and service interval |
If fretting is found during service, inspect more than the fastener. Check hole condition, plate contact, alignment, surface finish, and vibration source.
RFQ Checklist for Fretting-Sensitive Applications
What buyers should specify
A complete RFQ should include:
- Fastener type, standard, size, and grade.
- Nut and washer requirements.
- Surface finish and lubrication condition.
- Application load and vibration condition.
- Required torque or preload.
- Bearing surface or joint material information.
- Locking method if specified.
- Coating thickness or friction requirement.
- Certificate, inspection, and traceability requirements.
- Sample testing or assembly trial if required.
For project-specific bolts, washers, lock nuts, coated fasteners, or custom assemblies, send drawings and service conditions through XZ Fastener Contact Us.
Final Recommendation
Fretting wear in bolted joints is caused by small repeated movement between clamped surfaces. The real solution is to prevent that movement through proper preload, washer selection, surface control, joint design, and vibration management.
A stronger bolt alone may not solve fretting. A better coating alone may not solve it either. The fastening system must be selected as a complete joint. When preload, surface condition, washer support, and locking method are controlled together, fretting risk drops significantly.