How to Keep a Nut from Loosening

Vibration and thermal cycling loosen ordinary nuts over time. There are several ways to stop it, and they fall into two camps: friction (lock nuts, lock washers, thread locker) and positive mechanical locking (castle nut and cotter pin). This guide compares the methods so you can pick the right one for the joint.

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Comparison diagram of nut locking methods: nylon-insert lock nut, all-metal lock nut, serrated flange nut, castle nut with cotter pin, jam nut, and lock washer
The common anti-loosening methods, from nylon-insert lock nuts to castle nut and cotter pin.

The Methods, Compared

MethodHow it worksBest for
Nylon-insert lock nutNylon collar grips threads (friction)General assembly, moderate vibration, under ~250°F
All-metal lock nut (Stover)Distorted thread grips (friction)Heat, heavy-duty, reuse
Serrated flange nutTeeth bite the surfaceSoft/thin material, built-in washer
Jam nut (double-nut)Two nuts wedge on threadsSetting position, backing up a nut
Castle/slotted nut + cotter pinPositive mechanical lockSafety-critical, wheel bearings, aircraft
Lock washer (split / tooth)Spring tension or biteLight-duty supplement; least reliable alone
Thread locker (adhesive)Chemical bondWhen you can't change the nut; removable vs permanent grades

Which Should You Use?

  • Most jobs: a nylon-insert lock nut — simple, effective, one part.
  • Heat or heavy-duty: all-metal (Stover) lock nut; nylon fails above ~250°F.
  • Soft or thin material: serrated flange nut for built-in bearing and bite.
  • Safety-critical or must stay serviceable: castle/slotted nut with a cotter pin — the only positive, non-friction lock.
  • Can't change the nut: thread locker (blue = removable, red = permanent), or a jam nut.

For a deeper comparison of lock-nut styles, see our Lock Nut Comparison; for cotter-pinned nuts, see Castle vs Slotted vs Jam.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best way to keep a nut from coming loose?

For most assemblies, a nylon-insert or all-metal lock nut. For a positive lock that cannot back off — wheel bearings, aircraft, safety-critical joints — use a castle or slotted nut with a cotter pin. Match the method to the consequence of failure.

Do lock washers actually work?

Split and tooth lock washers add some resistance but are the least reliable method on their own, especially under heavy vibration. A dedicated lock nut or a cotter-pinned castle nut is more dependable. Use lock washers as a supplement, not the primary lock, on critical joints.

Is thread locker as good as a lock nut?

Thread locker works well when you can't change the nut, and it also seals threads. Use blue (removable) for serviceable joints and red (permanent) where you won't take it apart. For new designs a lock nut is usually simpler and cleaner; both can be combined for severe service.

Why do my nuts keep vibrating loose?

Either the joint isn't properly preloaded (under-torqued), or it's using a plain nut in a vibrating application. Torque to spec and switch to a lock nut, serrated flange nut, or a cotter-pinned castle nut depending on how critical the joint is.

Anti-Loosening Hardware in Stock

Lock nuts, flange nuts, castle/slotted nuts, cotter pins, and lock washers — from one source.

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