I just joined this sight today, so I'm checking it out and I come across a story about broken motor mount bolts. This gave me the Willies just thinking of an engine falling off mid flight. The fellow said that the bolts "sheared off". I find that highly unlikely, I don't think even the highest H.P. engine has the torque to shear off bolts. There are 3 ways a bolt can break: tension, shear and fatigue. It's pretty easy to tell, just by examining the bolt at the failure. A tension failure will be shiny with a bit of a crystal appearance, depending on the hardness of the bolt and the bolt will be smaller in diameter where it stretched. A bolt that fails in shear, will have a side that is rounded over and a sharp side, just like a piece of sheared plate and it would also do quite a bit of damage to that hole in that soft engine case. A bolt that fails from fatigue takes time, it has a tell tale appearance, it looks almost like tree rings, darker where it started to fail and brighter towards the break, with the brightest spot the last place holding prior to the failure. I am thinking of building one of the legal Eagles, I would want to figure out some motor mounts with built in safeties. Anyway, I hope this will help someone diagnose a failed bolt.
To Scott in Iowa...This is just my opinion, I am not an engineer or an I.A.Rubber is malleable... When you tighten the bolts the rubber takes the shape of of the metal cones. If you over tighten the bolts you negate the vibration dampening of the rubber and cause bolt fatigue. Not rocket science. Continental and Lycoming have used this method since forever...
maybe too loose or tight is the problem. need a good bolt, safety wired, yes washer on the backside ( does that really need to be said) and a proper torque value. Charlie, welcome to the site. Stick poking or stirring it up are not bad things. Tom XL-7