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Clevis Joint Types, Uses & Selection Guide

What Is a Clevis Joint? Types, Uses and How to Choose the Right One

If you've ever pulled a lever, operated a hydraulic cylinder, or driven a tractor — you've relied on a clevis joint without knowing it. They're one of those components that fly completely under the radar, right up until the moment one fails and half your machine stops moving.

This guide covers everything you need to know: what a clevis joint actually is, the main types you'll encounter, where they're used across industry, and — most importantly — how to pick the right one for your application.

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What Is a Clevis Joint?

A clevis joint is a simple mechanical connector that links two components while allowing limited pivoting or angular movement between them. Think of it as a hinge that also carries load.

The assembly has three core parts:

  • The clevis fork — the U-shaped (or forked) body with two parallel prongs, each with an aligned hole
  • The clevis pin — a cylindrical pin that passes through both prongs and the connected component, carrying the load in shear
  • The retaining device — a cotter pin, circlip, or spring clip that stops the clevis pin from walking out during operation

The connected component — usually a rod end, eye bolt, or ball joint — fits neatly between the two prongs, the pin passes through, the clip goes in, and you have a joint that transfers force smoothly while allowing the parts to pivot relative to each other.

That's genuinely it. No threads under load, no rigid connection that would crack under dynamic stress — just clean, mechanical simplicity.

How Does a Clevis Joint Work?

The clevis pin carries the entire load in shear (i.e., the force acts across the pin, not along it). This is important because shear loading is far more predictable than bending or tension in a dynamic environment.

When machinery moves — when a hydraulic cylinder extends, when a linkage arm rotates, when a trailer hitch takes a jolt — the clevis joint absorbs that angular change without transmitting bending stress into the connected rods. The result is smoother load transfer, reduced fatigue on connected components, and a much longer service life for the whole assembly.

Types of Clevis Joints

Not all clevis joints are the same. The right type depends entirely on your application.

Type

Description

Common Use

Rod clevis (female clevis)

U-shaped fork with a threaded base that screws onto a rod end

Hydraulic cylinders, actuators, linkage rods

Male clevis

Pin end that fits into the fork of a female clevis

Paired with rod clevises in adjustable linkages

Clevis shackle

Classic U-shape with a removable pin — no threaded base

Load lifting, rigging, tie-downs

Twin clevis (double clevis link)

Two clevis ends facing opposite directions on a single link

Connecting two separate assemblies

Clevis hanger

Combines a U-shaped and V-shaped clevis — designed to suspend pipe

HVAC, plumbing, pipe support systems

Quick-release clevis

Spring-loaded mechanism for fast assembly/disassembly

Agricultural machinery, frequent-change applications

For most industrial and mechanical engineering applications, you'll primarily be working with rod clevises (female clevis joints) and their corresponding male counterparts, paired on adjustable linkages.

Where Are Clevis Joints Used?

Clevis joints turn up across almost every sector of engineering and industry. Here are the most common places you'll find them:

Agriculture

Connecting ploughs, cultivators, and attachments to tractor linkage arms. Quick-release clevis designs are especially popular here because implements get swapped out regularly.

Hydraulics and Pneumatics

The rod end of almost every hydraulic cylinder terminates in a clevis joint. As the cylinder extends and retracts, the clevis allows the connected arm or mechanism to follow its natural arc without binding.

Construction and Plant Equipment

Excavator arms, loader buckets, crane hook assemblies — anywhere a heavy load needs to pivot under force, clevis joints are doing the work.

Industrial Machinery and Manufacturing

Control linkages, tensioner arms, clutch mechanisms, press tooling — anywhere you need to transmit linear or rotary motion between components that aren't perfectly aligned.

Marine and Rigging

Shackle-style clevis connectors are standard in sailing rigging, towing, and anchor chain assemblies where load security and quick release are both required.

Automotive

Brake pedal linkages, clutch linkages, and suspension components on commercial vehicles often use clevis connections at adjustment points.

How to Choose the Right Clevis Joint: 5 Key Factors

Picking the wrong clevis is one of those mistakes that seems fine right up until it isn't. Here's what actually matters.

1. Load Rating and Safety Factor

Calculate the maximum force the joint will carry — and then don't just match it, exceed it. A minimum safety factor of 1.5x is standard for most industrial applications; go to 2x or higher if there's shock loading, vibration, or any uncertainty in your load calculations.

If you're replacing a failed clevis, don't just replace like-for-like — find out why it failed first.

2. Thread Size and Pin Diameter

The clevis must match the rod thread (M6, M8, M10, M12, M16, M20, M24 are the common metric sizes) and the pin diameter must be rated for the shear load. These are not interchangeable — a pin that's 1mm undersized can reduce your shear capacity significantly.

Thread Size

Typical Pin Diameter

Indicative Load Capacity*

M6

6mm

Low — light linkages

M8

8mm

Light-medium — agricultural, small actuators

M10

10mm

Medium — general industrial

M12

12mm

Medium-heavy — hydraulic cylinders

M16

16mm

Heavy — plant, construction

M20–M24

20–24mm

Very heavy — cranes, structural


*Always check the manufacturer's rated working load for your specific product.

3. Material

Material

Best For

Watch Out For

Zinc-plated steel

General industrial, indoor/covered outdoor

Not suitable for marine or constant wet exposure

Stainless steel (303/316)

Marine, food processing, outdoor, corrosive environments

Higher cost; 316 for salt water

Alloy steel

High-load, shock-load applications

May need surface treatment for corrosion

Plastic (engineering polymer)

Light-load, corrosion-free, maintenance-free applications

Check load rating carefully

For most UK industrial and agricultural applications, zinc-plated steel covers the majority of jobs. If you're near salt water, working in a wash-down environment, or handling food, go stainless.

4. Thread Hand

This catches people out more often than it should. Most clevis joints come in right-hand thread as standard — but left-hand thread options exist and are used in turnbuckle-style arrangements where you need to adjust tension from the centre. Check before you order.

5. Retention Method

The clevis pin needs to be retained. Common options:

  • Cotter pin + washer — traditional, reliable, not quick to disassemble
  • Circlip (snap ring) — clean, compact, good for enclosed applications
  • Spring clip (retention clip) — fastest to assemble/disassemble, good for frequent change applications
  • Threaded nut — maximum security, used in high-vibration environments

If you're replacing or changing a clevis regularly, a spring clip retention is worth the small premium. If it's a permanent installation in a high-vibration machine, go cotter pin or threaded retention.

Clevis Joint vs Ball Joint vs Rod End — What's the Difference?

These three components often get confused and occasionally misused:

Feature

Clevis Joint

Ball Joint

Rod End (Rose Joint)

Movement

Pivot in one plane

Multi-axis

Multi-axis (misalignment)

Load type

Tension/shear

Tension/compression/shear

Tension/compression/shear

Typical use

Hydraulic cylinders, linkages

Suspension, steering

Tie rods, turnbuckles

Adjustability

Via thread on base

Limited

Yes — threaded shank

Complexity

Low

Medium

Medium

A clevis joint is your go-to for single-plane pivot under load. If you need multi-axis movement, you're looking at a ball joint or rod end instead.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Matching the thread but ignoring the pin. The pin is what carries the load. A M12 clevis with a pin rated for half your working load will fail — regardless of what the thread says on the box.
  • Skipping the retaining clip. It seems obvious, but an unretained clevis pin will walk out under vibration. It's not if, it's when.
  • Using steel in a marine environment. Zinc plate is not a marine coating. A standard steel clevis on a boat will rust solid within a season. Use 316 stainless.
  • Choosing right-hand thread when you need left. In adjustment linkages (like a turnbuckle), you need one right and one left. Ordering two rights means you can't adjust length without disconnecting.

FAQs

What is the difference between a clevis and a shackle?
A shackle is technically a type of clevis — it uses the same U-shaped body and pin — but shackles are designed primarily for lifting and rigging where the connected component is a hook or chain link. Clevis joints (particularly rod clevises) are designed for mechanical linkages where a threaded rod or cylinder end needs to be connected.

Can a clevis joint carry compression loads?
Clevis joints are primarily designed for tension (pulling) and shear loads. They can carry compression loads in principle, but the geometry means compression can cause the pin to want to be pushed out of the joint rather than pulled in. For applications with significant compression, consult the manufacturer's data sheet.

What does M12 mean on a clevis joint?
M12 refers to the metric thread diameter on the clevis shank — 12mm thread diameter. This is what screws into the rod end or cylinder. It does not describe the pin diameter, which is specified separately.

How do I know what size clevis joint I need?
You need three things: the thread size of the rod or component you're connecting to, the working load (maximum force the joint will carry), and the environmental conditions. From those three, you can select the right size, material, and pin rating.

Shop Clevis Joints at BEP Ltd

We stock a full range of clevis joints in zinc-plated steel and stainless steel, from M4 up to M24, with all the matching pins, circlips, cotter pins, and spring clips you need to complete the assembly.

Whether you're replacing a worn clevis on agricultural equipment, specifying a new hydraulic cylinder linkage, or building a custom mechanical assembly — our team can help you find the right part fast.

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