Posted by DiodeDick on 21/02/2022 23:03:21:
Neil Wyatt points out (above) that camera tripod threads were BSW, but are now UNC. The user guide for my JVC camcorder specifies the tripod thread as 6.35mm x 1.25p, with no mention of the thread form or angle.
A rose by any other name?
Dick
If camera owners were to measure what they actually have, I suspect they'd find a mixture, including threads that aren't to any particular standard.
Cameras need a short quick action thread that doesn't have to be strong or vibration resistant. 4 or 5 turns of any coarse thread on a not too tiny diameter will do. In Victorian times the obvious standard thread for this purpose was ¼" Whitworth. (Or ⅜" BSW for giant cameras.) In practice there's no need for the thread to be accurate – all is well provided it grips.
BSW lasted nearly a century, but during WW2 considerable trouble was caused by incompatibilities between US and British nuts and bolts. Two almost identical systems that didn't reliably fit together so a broken down American truck couldn't be fixed with a British bolt or vice versa. This is serious when millions of vehicles and machines are deployed in a shooting war. To reduce this problem in the event of another major war the British and Americans adopted a common system – Unified Threads. In practice the Unified System is being superseded by Metric/
After unification BSW and BSF were, at least in theory, not to be used for new manufacture. In consequence the standard thread for camera mounts was changed from BSW to UNC. Thing is, I doubt camera threads were ever made to a tight specification: they approximate BSW / UNC rather than match it slavishly. Moderate errors in TPI, diameter, flank angle and thread form don't matter. A real BSW will fit a real UNC and both will fit a metric approximation like 6.35mm x 1.25p. And so would US Sellers ¼ – 20 of 1868, which later became NC ¼ – 20.
Be interesting to survey exactly what threads are out there! For example:
- Outer diameter should all be about 6.35mm
- Flank angle. 55°=Whitworth, 60°=Sellers, NC, UNC or Metric)
- Male thread shape – probably, but note some standards allow optional variations
- rounded peaks and troughs=Whitworth
- flat peaks and troughs = Sellers
- flat peak, rounded troughs = NC, UNC or Metric
- Sharp V peak or trough – non standard.
No wonder pgrbff is 'Always confused over threads and tapping'. He lives in Metric Italy, and is trying to fix a pre-war British saw on a small budget. Unlike camera threads, getting the nuts and bolt exactly right on a machine is more important, and extra hard to do where he lives.
Dave