Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work.

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Mike Francis
 
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Default BA to metric conversion

Anybody out there go a conversion sheet for BA to Metric.

Thanks

Mike


  #2   Report Post  
Jordan
 
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BA is metric, sort of.
What's your problem?

Jordan

Mike Francis wrote:
Anybody out there go a conversion sheet for BA to Metric.

Thanks

Mike


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Nick Müller
 
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Jordan wrote:

BA is metric, sort of.


Oh no, not again. BA is not metric.
The "B" in BA stands for "British", so this _can't_ be metric. :-)

Nick
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David Billington
 
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BA thread are metric based, 0BA is 6mm diameter x 1mm pitch with 47.5
degree included angle IIRC. The BA number is used as a power in a
formula to produce the thread details.

Nick Müller wrote:

Jordan wrote:

BA is metric, sort of.


Oh no, not again. BA is not metric.
The "B" in BA stands for "British", so this _can't_ be metric. :-)

Nick


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Don Valentine
 
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We Brits are quite capable of working in metric thank you ;-)

BA series was created in 1890's to help standardise a thead form for the
emerging electrical industry.

The base is BA 0 which is a 6mm dia by 1mm pitch thread

Each additional pitch is 0.9 x pitch of previous size rounded to nearest
..01mm so they go 1.0, 0.9, 0.81, 0.73, ...

Diameter D is given by D = 6 x (P to the power 1.2) where P is the pitch

Core diameter is D - 1.2 x P

(Source Model Engineers Handbook - Tubal Cain ISBN 085242 715 8)

http://mdmetric.com/tech/thddat8.htm amongst many others has appropriate
charts

http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~chrish/threadch.htm has screwcutting details
for lathe with 8tpi leadscrew

Don Valentine

""Nick Müller"" wrote in message
...
Jordan wrote:

BA is metric, sort of.


Oh no, not again. BA is not metric.
The "B" in BA stands for "British", so this _can't_ be metric. :-)

Nick
--
Motormodelle / Engine Models
http://www.motor-manufaktur.de
todays SPAMfeed:





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Nick Müller
 
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Don Valentine wrote:

We Brits are quite capable of working in metric thank you ;-)


Don't get me wrong, I think the Brits are among the best model
engineers.
But I had the discussion here about 3 years ago: BA is not metric. Look
at the standards of metric threads and you know why.


BA series was created in 1890's


At that time there was _nothing_ like metric threads and this also
explains why BA isn't metric.


Nick

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Motormodelle / Engine Models
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yourname
 
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It was designed in metric but spec'd in english units. It is not
ISO.........but then again metric pipe is british.

it is correct to say it is metric, since the thread pitches are metric



Nick Müller wrote:
Don Valentine wrote:


We Brits are quite capable of working in metric thank you ;-)



Don't get me wrong, I think the Brits are among the best model
engineers.
But I had the discussion here about 3 years ago: BA is not metric. Look
at the standards of metric threads and you know why.



BA series was created in 1890's



At that time there was _nothing_ like metric threads and this also
explains why BA isn't metric.


Nick

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David Anderson
 
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BA (British Association) IS metric. When the original BA metric standards
are converted to dimensions in inches, the results are still correct, but
they are no longer in simplified units. That is why they seem so goofy. My
question: why are BA dimensions now expressed in inch units? Cheers, Dave
Anderson

"Mike Francis" wrote in message
...
Anybody out there go a conversion sheet for BA to Metric.

Thanks

Mike



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yourname
 
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Default

David Anderson wrote:
BA (British Association) IS metric. When the original BA metric standards
are converted to dimensions in inches, the results are still correct, but
they are no longer in simplified units. That is why they seem so goofy. My
question: why are BA dimensions now expressed in inch units? Cheers, Dave
Anderson

"Mike Francis" wrote in message
...

Anybody out there go a conversion sheet for BA to Metric.

Thanks

Mike




Short answer: friggin Brits


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Tom Miller
 
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"yourname" wrote in message news:x4Cqe.67$EH1.24@trndny03...
David Anderson wrote:
BA (British Association) IS metric. When the original BA metric

standards
are converted to dimensions in inches, the results are still correct,

but
they are no longer in simplified units. That is why they seem so goofy.

My
question: why are BA dimensions now expressed in inch units? Cheers,

Dave
Anderson

"Mike Francis" wrote in message
...

Anybody out there go a conversion sheet for BA to Metric.

Thanks

Mike




Short answer: friggin Brits

Friggin Yanks! Still using a measurement system based on the with of a
long dead foreign king's thumb when all the rest of the world is metric


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