Always confused over threads and tapping

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Always confused over threads and tapping

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  • #586674
    Hopper
    Participant
      @hopper
      Posted by bernard towers on 21/02/2022 19:24:26:

       

       

      I really have problem with this discussion as some of you are actually looking to mismatch fasteners, why do you think the designers of these fittings made both parts match..I could not in all honesty make stainless or any other material fasteners that did not match. Let’s be fair all the information required for thread sizes /rates /tapping sizes/ clearance/ and ods in the case of numbers is all out there pull it off print and read it.If a jobs worth doing.!!

      The OP lives in Italy and has limited access to any fasteners or taps/dies other than metric. As he said, he already has a 1/4 BSW tap but is expecting a new part of some sort to arrive that needs to use a 1/4 UNC thread. Importing a UNC tap for him to do this one job will cost him a large bundle of beer tokens.

      So for his purposes, it makes sense to use his existing BSW tap to make a thread to house the UNC thread when it arrives. I was merely pointing out that as I live under similar circumstances in Australia where BS fasteners and taps/dies are no longer commonly sold and cost a motza to order in specially, I routinely mix the two threads out of necessity and have never had a problem in many decades of doing so.

      But once again, the thread seems to have been sidetracked on microscopic minutiae, standards drawings and hypothetical "you can't do that"s, So the practical solution to the OP's simple practical question has been lost in the fog of theory

      Unless of course the OP's impending job is attaching the wings to the space shuttle. .

      Edited By Hopper on 21/02/2022 22:50:47

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      #586683
      DiodeDick
      Participant
        @diodedick

        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

        #586721
        SillyOldDuffer
        Moderator
          @sillyoldduffer
          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

          #586732
          Tony Pratt 1
          Participant
            @tonypratt1
            Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 22/02/2022 11:01:42:

            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

            I wonder if 1/4" x 20 TPI would suit?

            Tony

            #586735
            Hopper
            Participant
              @hopper
              Posted by Tony Pratt 1 on 22/02/2022 11:39:52:

              Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 22/02/2022 11:01:42:

              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

              I wonder if 1/4" x 20 TPI would suit?

              Tony

              Probably be close enough.

              Same thing at my local steel dealer recently: "We don't have imperial sized stock anymore. Gone completely metric."

              Yeah.

              20211215_131627.jpg

              Not sure if there is an ISO standard for 9.53mm bar, or 7.94mm or 6.35mm?

              #586754
              Martin Kyte
              Participant
                @martinkyte99762

                I guess the OP would be even more confused if someone mentioned the class of fit for a prticular thread (oops too late).

                Example in the link :-

                **LINK**

                regards Martin

                Edited By Martin Kyte on 22/02/2022 14:57:00

                #586770
                pgrbff
                Participant
                  @pgrbff
                  Posted by Martin Kyte on 22/02/2022 14:56:44:

                  I guess the OP would be even more confused if someone mentioned the class of fit for a prticular thread (oops too late).

                  Example in the link :-

                  **LINK**

                  regards Martin

                  Edited By Martin Kyte on 22/02/2022 14:57:00

                  I have read every reply. I'm not confused, just happy to have created some semi-heated debate on the subject.

                  I had to order one tap from the UK, so I ordered both, postage VAT and local charges will far outweigh the cost of the 2 taps.

                  #586784
                  Neil Wyatt
                  Moderator
                    @neilwyatt

                    And Microphone stands use 1/4", 3/8" and 1/2" BSW, obviously deliberately chosen to be at odds with camera tripods.

                    I have some internally and externally threaded adaptors – some of them are for cameras ,some for microphones… much potential for confusion!

                    Neil

                    #586838
                    Howard Lewis
                    Participant
                      @howardlewis46836

                      Hopper,

                      You are not alone.

                      My Record vice is fixed to the bench with home made nuts, 17 mm A/F but UNF threads.

                      The hexagon allows the torque to be applied and the thread applies the tensile load to hold things together.

                      On the Bristol RE bus, with manual transmission, the clutch was held to the Gardner engine (Which used Whitworth form threads ) with 5/16 BSW bolts, with 5/8 A/F heads!

                      All the other fittings on the vehicle were A/F, (Unified ) so that was the logic.

                      Chiefie did not seem to be aware of this, thank goodness, see below..

                      We found that Whitworth form bolts would not screw into the Unified tappings in Clayton Dewandre air brake valves, so used to tap them out. Our Chief Engineer, at the time, would not countenance having Unified threads, anywhere!.

                      Howard

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