Ah I see. That analysis works if you neglect the free body diagram of the system. I agree with your analysis if one larger terminal were analogous to two smaller ones. But it is not.
When a bolt applies clamp force it does so to every thing in between the bolt head and the anchoring threads. All of the force is transmitted along the bolt shaft from the mating threads to the head of the bolt and then back down whatever is in between the bolt head and the mating threads.
If this were not the case no fasteners would work. The only exception is when you have multiple mating threaded regions, rust, etc.
If you put one washer in between the bolt head and the threads obviously it must feel the full force of the clamping, or else some force went missing.
If you put two washers in between they're both still trapped in this identical clamp force situation.
This can be extended by induction about as far as you'd like. Certainly 2,3,5,10 washers. Even to 100. Eventually gravity and other things start to creep in at much, much larger scales. If you wanted to clamp 1 million washers this simple analysis would fall apart of course.
When a bolt applies clamp force it does so to every thing in between the bolt head and the anchoring threads. All of the force is transmitted along the bolt shaft from the mating threads to the head of the bolt and then back down whatever is in between the bolt head and the mating threads.
If this were not the case no fasteners would work. The only exception is when you have multiple mating threaded regions, rust, etc.
If you put one washer in between the bolt head and the threads obviously it must feel the full force of the clamping, or else some force went missing.
If you put two washers in between they're both still trapped in this identical clamp force situation.
This can be extended by induction about as far as you'd like. Certainly 2,3,5,10 washers. Even to 100. Eventually gravity and other things start to creep in at much, much larger scales. If you wanted to clamp 1 million washers this simple analysis would fall apart of course.