Slotted nuts are used where a nut must be mechanically locked in position after tightening. In many field assemblies, especially where vibration or rotation is present, relying on friction alone is not enough.
A slotted nut works with a drilled bolt, stud, shaft, or pin. After the nut is tightened to the required position, a cotter pin or split pin passes through the slots and the drilled hole. This prevents the nut from backing off.
What Is a Slotted Nut?
Basic Structure
A slotted nut has slots cut into the top section of the nut. These slots allow a cotter pin to pass through the nut and the mating fastener.
Common related names include slotted hex nut, castle the mating nut, castellated nut, and hexagon slotted nut. Standards may vary by market, such as DIN, ISO, ASME, or project drawings.
For general nut and bolt sourcing, buyers can start from standard fasteners and confirm the exact nut standard before ordering.
Where Slotted Nuts Are Used
Typical Anti-Loosening Applications
Slotted nuts are common in assemblies where movement, vibration, or service safety requires a positive locking method.
| Приложение | Common Use | Key Buying Check |
|---|---|---|
| Axle and wheel assemblies | Position locking on shafts | Cotter pin hole alignment |
| Agricultural machinery | Linkages, pivots, moving joints | Vibration and dirt exposure |
| Construction equipment | Hinges, pins, support arms | Nut grade and coating |
| Steering or suspension parts | Controlled locking after adjustment | Correct torque and pin fit |
| Clevis and linkage systems | Mechanical retention | Slot width and pin size |
For heavy-duty equipment or load-bearing joints, review high-strength fasteners and confirm the bolt, nut, washer, and pin as one assembly.
Why Slotted Nuts Help Prevent Loosening
Mechanical Locking Is the Main Benefit
A slotted nut does not depend only on thread friction. The cotter pin creates a physical stop. Even if vibration reduces preload, the nut cannot freely rotate off the thread.
This makes slotted nuts useful where inspection and maintenance are expected. They are also preferred when operators need a visible locking method.
However, they are not a universal replacement for all lock nuts. In high-preload structural joints or sealed compact assemblies, another locking method may be more suitable.
Key Specification Points
Do Not Order by Size Alone
A complete slotted nut RFQ should include more than nominal diameter.
Confirm:
- Thread system: metric, UNC, or UNF
- Diameter and pitch or TPI
- Nut standard: DIN, ISO, ASME, or drawing
- Nut grade and material
- Slot width and slot depth
- Matching drilled bolt or shaft hole
- Cotter pin size
- Surface finish or coating
For coating selection, compare various coated fasteners before confirming zinc, HDG, black, stainless, or zinc flake finish.
Common Mistakes Buyers Should Avoid
Field Problems Usually Start in the RFQ
The most common mistakes are simple:
- Ordering the nut without the matching drilled bolt.
- Forgetting cotter pin size.
- Using the wrong thread pitch.
- Choosing a nut grade that does not match the bolt.
- Ignoring coating thickness and thread fit.
- Assuming castle nuts and slotted nuts are always interchangeable.
- Not checking whether the slots align after tightening.
For special nut forms, non-standard slot dimensions, or drawing-based assemblies, use custom non-standard fasteners and provide drawings before production.
Final Advice
Slotted nuts are suitable for anti-loosening assemblies where a visible mechanical lock is required. They work best when specified as a complete system: nut, drilled bolt or shaft, cotter pin, washer, grade, coating, and inspection requirement.
For broader sourcing, buyers can review the full fastener products range and define the assembly clearly before placing theorder.