Hi Duncan,
Before the days of Wikipedia it was fairly difficult to find the dimensions, Zeus and the Reeves equivalent were not much help, unless you just wanted to tap a hole. I f you are getting serious about engineering, try to locate a copy of “Machinery’s Handbook” it is a fountain of knowledge of nearly all things mechanical. Don’t be put off by the fact that it is American, some good things come from there, it covers British stuff too.
On the BA thread front I got so fed up with the lack of dimensions in a handy form, that I made my own appendix to the ZEUS book, which had ALL the dimensions and in both imperial and metric units.
The moral for a “NOOB” here is just because you can’t get something you want, make it yourself. There are a lot of useful gadgets and gizmos out there that no one makes, so remedy the situation for yourself. If you think something might work or would be handy, within the bounds of safe practice, give it a go, you will learn something from both success and failure. The FIRST “E” in SMEE is for Experimental.
Here endeth the philosophy class.
chris stephens
PS Quite often when using a die to cut a thread, there is a raised burr formed which gives the impression that the stock has grown, a fine file or appropriate abrasive will soon clean this back to size.