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Product Engineering Reference

Sleeve & Bolt Anchors

A comprehensive engineering reference for civil engineers, EPC contractors, building services engineers and procurement teams — covering sleeve anchor and bolt anchor expansion mechanics, substrate compatibility, single vs double expansion, load capacity reference, dimensional standards, material grades and full project documentation.

ACI 318 / EN 1992-4 M6 – M20 / 1/4" – 3/4" Concrete · Brick · Block · Stone CS · HDG · SS 304/316 · Duplex Single & Double Expansion EN 10204 3.1 MTC
Sleeve and Bolt Anchors by RR Hydraulics
600+
SKUs in Stock
M6–M20
Metric Range
1/4"–3/4"
Inch Range
8+
Distinct Types
8+
Material Grades
48 hr
Express Dispatch
Part 01

Sleeve & Bolt Anchor Types,
Expansion Mechanics & Substrate Compatibility

Sleeve and Bolt Anchor types and expansion mechanics
Part 01 — Types, Expansion Mechanics & Substrate Compatibility
Sleeve Anchor · Bolt Anchor · Single Expansion · Double Expansion
Concrete · Brick · Block · Masonry · ACI 318 · EN 1992-4
Sleeve Anchor · Bolt Anchor · Single Expansion Anchor · Double Expansion Anchor · Nail-in Anchor · Masonry Anchor · Concrete Anchor · Expansion Clip · Expansion Sleeve · Pull-Out · Pull-Over · ACI 318 · EN 1992-4 · 

Definition and Engineering Function

Sleeve anchors and bolt anchors are post-installed mechanical expansion anchors designed for fixing into solid masonry substrates — concrete, brick, solid block, natural stone and mortar-filled hollow sections. Unlike wedge anchors which develop capacity exclusively through a hardened wedge clip at the base, sleeve and bolt anchors distribute their expansion force along a greater sleeve length, making them suitable for a wider range of substrate materials including lower-strength masonry and brick that would be damaged by the concentrated point load of a wedge anchor clip.

The sleeve anchor consists of an internally threaded expansion sleeve over a cone-shaped stud. When a bolt or machine screw is turned into the sleeve, the sleeve is compressed against the cone, expanding radially outward against the hole wall over a defined contact length. The bolt anchor (also called a sleeve bolt anchor) integrates the bolt, cone and expansion sleeve into a single pre-assembled unit — the bolt is inserted through the fixture and driven into the drilled hole; turning the hex head or nut draws the cone into the sleeve and sets the expansion. Both types are available in single-expansion (one expansion zone) and double-expansion (two independently expanding zones) configurations, with double-expansion providing greater load distribution and suitability for weaker or variable-quality substrates.

Engineering Advantage — Extended Sleeve Contact vs Wedge Point Contact

The fundamental engineering advantage of a sleeve anchor over a wedge anchor in masonry and lower-strength concrete is the distributed bearing area of the expansion sleeve. A wedge anchor concentrates the entire expansion force at a single narrow clip zone — producing very high local bearing stress against the hole wall that can fracture weak or porous masonry. The sleeve anchor spreads this force over the full sleeve length (typically 20–50 mm), reducing the bearing stress per unit area by 5–10×. This makes sleeve anchors the preferred choice for brick, concrete block, aerated concrete, natural stone and lower-grade concrete (f'c 10–20 MPa) where concentrated point loads from wedge anchors would cause local crushing and pull-out failure at loads well below the design capacity.

Request a Formal Quotation — Sleeve & Bolt Anchors, All Types & Grades
Single / double expansion · CS HDG / SS 304/316 / Duplex · M6–M20 · EN 10204 MTC

Sleeve & Bolt Anchor Types — Engineering Descriptions

Single Expansion Sleeve Anchor
Standard · concrete & hard masonry
One expansion zone at the base of the sleeve. Tightening the nut or bolt head draws the inner cone into the sleeve, expanding a single zone of sleeve segments against the hole wall. Suitable for solid concrete (f'c ≥20 MPa), solid brick and natural stone. The most widely used sleeve anchor for building services, pipe hangers, cable management, signage and general masonry fixing. Available with hex bolt head (bolt anchor) or with threaded stud for nut-and-washer application.
Double Expansion Sleeve Anchor
Weak masonry · variable quality
Two independently acting expansion zones along the sleeve length. Each zone expands separately as the bolt is tightened, distributing the holding force across twice the contact area. Suitable for lower-strength concrete (f'c 10–20 MPa), brickwork, medium-density block, semi-hollow masonry and substrates of variable or uncertain quality. The double expansion mechanism compensates for voids, inclusions and variable density in the substrate — one zone continues to expand even if the other zone encounters a weak spot.
Bolt Anchor (Hex Bolt Type)
All-in-one · fast installation
Pre-assembled unit with hex bolt body, expansion sleeve and cone. The bolt is inserted through the fixture and into the drilled hole; tightening the hex head expands the sleeve automatically. The fixture is clamped simultaneously. No separate nut required for setting. Faster installation than a sleeve anchor plus separate fastener. Available in hex bolt or flat countersunk head. Standard for pipe clips, cable tray, conduit saddles and general building services fixing.
Nail-in Sleeve Anchor
Hammer drive · light duty
A hammer-driven variant of the sleeve anchor. A steel pin is driven through the anchor with a hammer rather than turned with a wrench, expanding the sleeve segments against the hole wall on impact. Fastest installation method — no tools beyond a hammer required after drilling. Suitable for light-duty fixing (signage, cable clips, insulation anchors) in concrete, brick and block. Not appropriate for structural, overhead or safety-critical applications where measurable holding force is required.
Stainless Sleeve Anchor — SS 304/316
Corrosion resistant · outdoor/coastal
Full stainless steel assembly (bolt, sleeve, cone) in SS 304 or SS 316 for outdoor, coastal, marine and chemical-resistant applications. SS 316 mandatory within 1 km of breaking surf or in chloride-rich environments. Used for external architectural fixing, cladding anchors, handrails and balustrades in concrete and masonry, swimming pool surrounds and marine structure fixings. SS sleeve anchors provide long-term corrosion resistance without galvanic corrosion at dissimilar metal contacts.
Heavy-Duty Bolt Anchor
Structural · high load · threaded rod
Large-diameter bolt anchor (M16–M20) with an enlarged sleeve and heavy-section bolt body providing structural-grade load capacity. Used for structural steel bracket connections to masonry columns and walls, heavy pipe support brackets, mechanical equipment mounting on masonry plinths and mezzanine floor connections to masonry walls. Hex bolt head for wrench tightening; all-carbon steel or HDG for outdoor structural applications.

Single vs Double Expansion — Substrate Suitability

Single Expansion Hard Masonry
Concretef'c ≥ 20 MPa — Yes
Solid brickClass B+ — Yes
Natural stoneGranite / sandstone — Yes
Concrete block (solid)Dense aggregate — Yes
Low-grade concrete (f'c <17 MPa)Marginal — verify
Hollow block / AAC blockNot suitable
Variable quality masonryNot suitable — use double
Double Expansion — Weak / Variable Masonry
Concretef'c 10–25 MPa — Yes
Brickwork (general)All grades — Yes
Medium-density blockYes — preferred
Reclaimed / old masonryVariable — Yes
Aerated concrete (AAC)With caution — verify load
Hollow blockMarginal — use specialist
High-strength concrete (>35 MPa)Use single or wedge anchor
Part 02

Dimensional Data, Minimum Embedment
& Load Capacity Reference

Sleeve and Bolt Anchor dimensional data
Part 02 — Dimensional Data, Embedment & Load Capacity Reference
Anchor Dia. · Drill Dia. · Min. Embedment · Min. Edge Distance
Tension · Shear · Concrete f'c · Brick · Block
M6 · M8 · M10 · M12 · M16 · M20 · Drill Diameter · Anchor Length · Min. Embedment · Min. Edge Distance · Min. Spacing · Tension Capacity · Shear Capacity · Concrete · Brick · Block · 
Sourcing Sleeve & Bolt Anchors for a Construction Project?
All sizes · single & double expansion · CS HDG / SS / Duplex · EN 10204 MTC documentation

Dimensional Reference & Minimum Installation Requirements

Table 1 — Sleeve & Bolt Anchor Key Dimensions (Single Expansion, Metric)
Anchor Dia.Drill Dia. (mm)Anchor Lengths (mm)Min Embed. (mm)Min Edge Dist. (mm)Min Spacing (mm)Min Substrate Thick. (mm)
M6840, 50, 60, 7530404060
M81050, 60, 75, 10040505080
M101260, 75, 100, 125506060100
M121475, 100, 125, 150607575120
M1618100, 125, 150, 20080100100160
M2022125, 150, 200, 250100125125200

Indicative dimensions based on standard sleeve anchor manufacturer data. Actual minimum embedment and edge distances depend on applied loads, substrate grade and the product-specific evaluation data. Anchor length must be sufficient for the embedment depth PLUS the fixture thickness PLUS the nut-and-washer stack height above the fixture. Always verify with the product technical datasheet and installation instructions. Drill diameter must exactly match the specified drill size — oversize holes reduce holding capacity significantly.

Table 2 — Indicative Load Capacity — Single Expansion Sleeve Anchor, M10, Various Substrates
Substratef'c / GradeEmbedment (mm)Char. Tension (kN)Char. Shear (kN)Recommended Use
Normal-weight concretef'c = 25 MPa508.07.5Standard
Normal-weight concretef'c = 20 MPa506.56.2Standard
Normal-weight concretef'c = 15 MPa505.04.8Verify
Solid clay brickClass B504.24.0Light duty
Dense concrete block7 N/mm²503.53.2Light–medium
Medium density block3.6 N/mm²502.01.8Light only
Aerated concrete (AAC)500.80.7Specialist anchor

Indicative characteristic values — for preliminary design guidance only. Actual design values must be obtained from the product-specific technical approval (ETA / ICC-ES) for the exact anchor product and substrate tested. Design values = characteristic × φ (capacity reduction factor, typically 0.65). Brick and block capacities are highly variable depending on the quality, density and mortar condition of the specific masonry unit — test in-situ where load-critical.

Sleeve Anchor — Minimum Fixture Thickness & Anchor Length Selection L_anchor h_ef + t_fixture + t_washer + h_nut + 3 × p // p = thread pitch [mm]; minimum thread projection beyond nut
h_ef = embedment depth [mm] // from concrete surface to bottom of expansion zone

// WORKED EXAMPLE: M10 sleeve anchor, pipe hanger bracket 8mm thick, h_ef=50mm, p=1.5mm
L_min = 50 + 8 + 2 + 8 + (3×1.5) = 72.5 mm // Select next standard length: 75 mm
// Note: h_ef of 50mm is achieved since L_anchor − t_fixture − t_washer − h_nut − thread proj. ≅ 50 mm
Part 03

Material Grades, Mechanical Properties
& Surface Treatments

Sleeve and Bolt Anchor materials and coatings
Part 03 — Materials, Mechanical Properties & Surface Treatments
Carbon Steel · HDG · SS 304/316 · Duplex 2205
Zinc Plate · Epoxy · Passivation · Coastal / Marine
Carbon Steel Gr.4.6 · Gr.5.8 · SS 304 A2 · SS 316 A4 · Duplex 2205 · HDG ASTM A153 · Zinc B633 · Epoxy Coat · Stainless Passivation · Galvanic Protection · 
Table 3 — Material Grades for Sleeve & Bolt Anchors
GradeStandardYield (MPa)UTS (MPa)CorrosionApplication
CS Grade 4.6ISO 898-1≥240≥400LowIndoor dry; sheltered masonry; light duty
CS Grade 5.8ISO 898-1≥400≥500LowGeneral indoor; sheltered building services
CS Grade 8.8ISO 898-2≥640≥800LowHeavy-duty structural; high loads
CS HDG (Grade 5.8)ASTM A153 / ISO 1461≥400≥500GoodOutdoor structural; masonry facade; post & beam
SS 304 (A2)ISO 3506-1≥210≥500HighOutdoor, architectural, food, marine-adjacent
SS 316 (A4)ISO 3506-1≥210≥500Very HighCoastal, marine, pool, chemical environments
Duplex 2205ASTM A182 F51≥450≥620Very HighOffshore concrete, severe marine, sour service
Brass (CuZn37)BS 2872≥240≥370GoodNon-sparking; electrical; light duty masonry
Table 4 — Surface Treatment Options for Sleeve & Bolt Anchors
FinishStandardThickness (µm)Salt Spray (hrs)Application
Zinc electroplateASTM B633 SC28–1396–120Indoor / sheltered; light corrosion; not external exposed
Mechanically galvanisedASTM B695 Cl.1212 min200Better than zinc plate; no HE risk; outdoor sheltered
Hot-dip galvanisedASTM A153 / ISO 146145–86500+Standard outdoor structural masonry fixing; coastal-adjacent
Epoxy coatBS EN 1343860–1501000+Aggressive outdoor / coastal concrete; bridge / marine infrastructure
SS 304 passivationASTM A380N/A1000+All SS 304 sleeve anchors; outdoor / marine-adjacent
SS 316 passivationASTM A380N/A1000+Coastal / marine / pool / chemical environments
Climaseal / GeometISO 106838–12480–720Alternative to HDG for outdoor; no H₂ embrittlement risk

The expansion sleeve and bolt body must be made of compatible materials to prevent galvanic corrosion at their contact interface. For outdoor or wet environments, do NOT mix a carbon steel bolt body with a stainless steel sleeve (or vice versa) — always specify the complete anchor assembly (bolt + sleeve + cone + nut + washer) in the same material grade. Standard sleeve anchors are supplied as matched complete assemblies — do not substitute individual components from different material grades.

Galvanic Compatibility Warning — Mixed Material Assemblies

Never assemble a sleeve anchor using components from different material families — for example, inserting a stainless bolt through a carbon steel sleeve expansion assembly. In any wet or humid environment, the galvanic couple between carbon steel and stainless steel accelerates corrosion of the carbon steel component (the anodic material) at the contact interface. In masonry and concrete environments, moisture ingress through the hole is nearly certain — always specify complete assemblies in matched materials. If a sleeve anchor is used with a separately sourced bolt (e.g., a threaded rod for a hanger), specify the rod and the anchor sleeve in the same material grade.

Part 04

Installation Requirements, QC,
Applications & Export Documentation

Sleeve and Bolt Anchor installation and applications
Part 04 — Installation, QC, Applications & Documentation
Rotary Hammer · Hole Cleaning · Setting Torque · Pull-Test
MEP · Cable Tray · Pipe Hanger · Cladding · Structural
Rotary Hammer · SDS Bit · Hole Cleaning · Setting Torque · Pull-Test · MEP Services · Cable Tray · Pipe Hanger · Conduit Saddle · Curtain Wall · Cladding · Balustrade · Structural Bracket · 

Installation Requirements

Step 1 — Drilling

Drill the hole using a rotary hammer drill with a carbide-tipped SDS or SDS-Plus bit of the exact specified drill diameter. The hole depth must equal the embedment depth plus clearance for drill tip swarf (typically 10–15 mm additional depth). In brick and block, use a standard rotary hammer with the rotation-only mode — do not use hammer-only or combined hammer mode in brick or block substrates as the percussion can fracture the masonry unit or joint. In concrete, rotary hammer mode with carbide SDS bit is standard. Ensure the drill is held perpendicular to the surface — an angled hole reduces the effective embedment depth and bearing area of the sleeve.

Step 2 — Hole Cleaning

Remove all drilling debris from the hole before inserting the anchor. Loose masonry dust and swarf act as a lubricant at the sleeve-to-substrate interface, reducing friction-based holding capacity. Clean with two blow/brush cycles: blow compressed air from bottom-up to expel swarf, brush with a stiff wire brush of the correct diameter, and blow again. For sleeve anchors in brick and block — which may have internal cavities or voids — visually inspect the hole depth before inserting the anchor to confirm a full solid embedment depth is available.

Step 3 — Insertion and Setting

For bolt anchor types: insert the complete assembly through the fixture and into the hole. Ensure the sleeve base contacts the bottom of the hole. For sleeve anchor types: insert the threaded sleeve into the hole, then pass the bolt through the fixture and thread into the sleeve. Hand-tighten until the washer contacts the fixture surface. Then tighten with a wrench to the specified installation torque — this draws the cone into the sleeve and sets the expansion. Over-tightening can fracture the bolt shank or crush the sleeve if the substrate is weak — always use a torque wrench for safety-critical applications.

Step 4 — Verification and Pull Testing

For life-safety, overhead or structural applications, proof-load testing of installed anchors using a portable hydraulic pull-test jack is specified. The proof load is typically 80% of the design load. An anchor that displaces under proof load indicates an inadequate substrate condition, insufficient embedment or improper installation. In-situ pull testing is also recommended as a commissioning activity when anchoring into unknown or uncertain masonry — particularly in renovation and retrofit projects where the substrate condition and strength cannot be confirmed from records.

Applications by Industry

MEP Building Services — The Primary Application

Sleeve and bolt anchors are the most widely used anchor in mechanical, electrical and plumbing (MEP) building services for fixing cable trays, conduit saddles, pipe hangers, HVAC duct supports, sprinkler pipe clips, lighting trunking, electrical equipment panels and cable ladder systems to concrete ceilings, walls and floors. The M8 and M10 bolt anchor in zinc-plated or HDG carbon steel is the standard for pipe hangers and cable tray supports in commercial and industrial buildings. SS 316 is specified for food production, pharmaceutical, cleanroom and corrosive-atmosphere buildings. For seismic restraint of MEP services in seismic zones, ICC-ES evaluated anchors per FEMA 412 guidelines must be specified.

Curtain Wall and Facade Cladding

Sleeve anchors in SS 316 or HDG carbon steel are used to fix curtain wall transom and mullion brackets, rainscreen cladding support brackets, stone cladding support angles, terracotta panel retention brackets and architectural metal cladding carriers to the structural concrete slab edge and concrete frame of buildings. Facade anchoring is a safety-critical application — anchor failure can result in cladding panel release at height. Facade engineers specify anchor sizes, embedment depths and edge distances based on wind suction and gravity loads per BS 8539 (UK) or EN 1992-4 (Europe), and in-situ pull testing of representative anchor installations is usually required as part of the facade package commissioning.

Structural Bracket Connections — Masonry Walls

Heavy-duty M16 and M20 bolt anchors in HDG or SS 316 are used for structural steel bracket connections to masonry walls, columns and piers — supporting steel staircase brackets, mezzanine floor beam connections, plant room equipment support brackets and overhead structural steelwork. For these applications, the anchor design must follow EN 1992-4 or the applicable structural design code with due account of masonry strength variability. In-situ anchor testing per EN 1881 is recommended to verify characteristic resistance in the actual masonry substrate.

Balustrades and Handrails

SS 316 sleeve and bolt anchors are the standard for handrail post base plate connections to concrete stairs, balconies, terraces and external walkways. The handrail anchor must resist the horizontal design load imposed by persons leaning against the rail (1.5–3.0 kN per post depending on code and location) — a predominantly shear load on the anchor at the concrete surface. SS 316 is mandatory for all outdoor balustrade anchoring due to the long design life required (typically 25–50 years) and the safety-critical nature of the connection. In-situ pull and shear testing per the project structural engineer's specification is standard on major balustrade installations.

Offshore and Marine Concrete Structures

Sleeve and bolt anchors in SS 316 or duplex 2205 are used for equipment fixing, cable management, structural bracket connections and safety equipment mounting on offshore concrete gravity base structures (GBS), port and harbour concrete jetties, seawall copings and coastal infrastructure. The high chloride, wet-dry cycling marine environment demands SS 316 minimum for all exposed fixings — carbon steel anchors (even HDG) corrode within 2–5 years in direct marine exposure, leaving anchor holes that provide a corrosion pathway into the reinforced concrete structure.

Export Packaging and Preservation

  • Sleeve and bolt anchors packed in sealed polypropylene bags or cardboard boxes by size and type, labelled with anchor diameter, length, type (single/double expansion, bolt/sleeve), material grade, coating, batch/lot number and quantity
  • Each bag or box must contain complete assembly sets — matching sleeve, bolt, washer and nut — clearly verified before sealing; missing components found on-site cause installation delays
  • VCI desiccant sachet inside each bag for zinc-plated carbon steel anchors for sea freight; HDG anchors generally do not require VCI but must be kept dry
  • SS anchors in clean sealed bags, segregated from carbon steel; avoid contact with ferrous metals during transport and storage
  • Double-wall corrugated master cartons; pallets on ISPM-15 heat-treated timber with stretch wrap
  • MTC (EN 10204 3.1), dimensional inspection report, mechanical test report, salt spray / corrosion certificate, PMI report (SS/duplex), and all project documents in waterproof sealed envelope with each pallet
EPC & Project Documentation Package — Sleeve & Bolt Anchors (10 Documents)
#DocumentStandard / ReferenceMinimum Requirement
01Material Test Certificate (MTC)EN 10204 3.13.1 for EPC structural; 3.2 for offshore / safety-critical / seismic
02Dimensional Inspection ReportManufacturer / ETAAQL 1.0; anchor diameter, sleeve length, bolt length as mandatory chars
03Mechanical Test ReportISO 898-1 / ISO 3506-1Proof load and tensile strength per batch; installation torque confirmed
04Corrosion / Salt Spray CertificateISO 9227 / ASTM B117Required for all coated anchors; hours-to-first-rust per coating class
05ETA / ICC-ES Evaluation ReportEN 1992-4 / ICC-ESRequired for structural and seismic applications; ETA or ESR number stated
06In-Situ Pull Test RecordsEN 1881 / project spec.For safety-critical, overhead and facade applications — on-site test records
07PMI Report (XRF / OES)Project specification100% of SS, duplex and all alloy grade sleeve / bolt anchors
08Hardness Test ReportASTM E10 / E18NACE sour service: ≤22 HRC full cross-section; duplex ferrite content
09ISO 9001 Manufacturer CertificateISO 9001:2015Current; scope must include sleeve and bolt anchor manufacture
10ISPM-15 Phytosanitary CertificateIPPC / FAOAll wood packing for international export
Manufacturer Capability — RR Hydraulics

RR Hydraulics manufactures and exports sleeve and bolt anchors in all types — single expansion, double expansion, bolt anchor (hex bolt type), nail-in and heavy-duty — in carbon steel grades 4.6, 5.8 and 8.8, hot-dip galvanised (ASTM A153 / ISO 1461), stainless steel SS 304 and SS 316, duplex 2205 and brass. Sizes M6–M20 metric and 1/4"–3/4" inch UNC. Coatings: zinc plate, mechanical zinc, HDG, Climaseal/Geomet, epoxy, SS passivation. EN 10204 3.1 MTC, mechanical test reports, salt spray certificates, PMI, ETA/ICC-ES compliance reference. 48-hour express dispatch on standard in-stock sizes.

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