What are they called?
As the subject..
They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. Rick... (The other Rick) |
What are they called?
"Rick" wrote in message ... As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. Rick... (The other Rick) I know what you mean and have used loads of them - but I dont know what they're called ... sorry Regards |
What are they called?
Rick said the following on 30/11/2005 11:34:
As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. Rick... (The other Rick) Spiderfixes see: http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.as...rWebTemplate=C or http://tinyurl.com/bp2rk if the above link fails. |
What are they called?
On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 12:00:35 +0000, Rumble .@. wrote:
Rick said the following on 30/11/2005 11:34: As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. Rick... (The other Rick) Spiderfixes see: http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.as...rWebTemplate=C or http://tinyurl.com/bp2rk if the above link fails. BRILLIANT.... Many thanks. I have been trying all sorts of combinations of washer, clip and spring steel on Google, but had no result. Again, Many Thanks Rick... (The other Rick) |
What are they called?
In article ,
Rick wrote: They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Radiospares call them "Push-on Retaining Fixings", which doesn't sound like the name I can't remember. http://rswww.com 2mm = part number 172-307, up to 7/16" which is 172-470. -- Tony Williams. |
What are they called?
They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel,
they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. External circlips maybe? Phil |
What are they called?
On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 11:34:12 +0000, Rick wrote:
As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. Rick... (The other Rick) Many thanks to all who have replied. I now know what to get and where from... Thanks again.. Rick... (The other Rick) |
What are they called?
In an earlier contribution to this discussion,
Rick wrote: On Wed, 30 Nov 2005 11:34:12 +0000, Rick wrote: As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. Rick... (The other Rick) Many thanks to all who have replied. I now know what to get and where from... Thanks again.. Rick... (The other Rick) They're also sometimes called "Starlock washers" - see http://tinyurl.com/bssa8 -- Cheers, Set Square ______ Please reply to newsgroup. Reply address is invalid. |
What are they called?
Spiderfixes see: http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.as...rWebTemplate=C Well you learn something every day. Always called them clip washer thingies before. Cheers! Henry |
What are they called?
Henry wrote:
Spiderfixes see: http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.as...uctID=nqgmmtvx tg&strWebTemplate=C Well you learn something every day. Always called them clip washer thingies before. Cheers! Henry There actually called... "toothed locking washers". -- Sir Benjamin Middlethwaite |
What are they called?
In article ,
Rick wrote: They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. If you only want a few, Halfords do them in one of their 'assorted fixings' boxes. -- *Could it be that "I do " is the longest sentence? * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
What are they called?
The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give
a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Nah, I thing those are called 'captive nuts' - different thing |
What are they called?
We were somewhere around Barstow, on the edge of the desert, when the
drugs began to take hold. I remember Rick saying something like: As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. I heard a good name for them t'other day. Cat's arseholes. -- Dave |
What are they called?
In article .com,
Homer2911 wrote: The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Nah, I thing those are called 'captive nuts' - different thing I realised soon after posting that I was wrong. ;-) But I've a feeling they have a name too. A captive nut suggests something a bolt goes into rather than a self tapper. -- *If love is blind, why is lingerie so popular? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
What are they called?
In message , Rick
writes As the subject.. They look like washers with wings internally and made of spring steel, they are designed to slide onto a bar in one direction only and act as a cheap nut. The seem to be found in mass produced items. Once I know what they are called I can Google for a supplier. I think they're known as "push-on fasteners" in the RS catalogue -- geoff |
What are they called?
In article .com,
Homer2911 wrote: The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Nah, I thing those are called 'captive nuts' - different thing I thought they were called spire clips? -- Tony Bryer SDA UK 'Software to build on' http://www.sda.co.uk Free SEDBUK boiler database browser http://www.sda.co.uk/qsedbuk.htm [Latest version QSEDBUK 1.10 released 4 April 2005] |
What are they called?
Dave Plowman (News) said the following on 30/11/2005 19:23:
In article .com, Homer2911 wrote: The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Nah, I thing those are called 'captive nuts' - different thing I realised soon after posting that I was wrong. ;-) But I've a feeling they have a name too. A captive nut suggests something a bolt goes into rather than a self tapper. http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.aspx?intGroupID=918 |
What are they called?
|
What are they called?
On Thu, 01 Dec 2005 11:45:53 GMT, Tony Bryer
wrote: In article .com, Homer2911 wrote: The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Nah, I thing those are called 'captive nuts' - different thing I thought they were called spire clips? They are. -- |
What are they called?
In article ,
Rumble .@. wrote: I realised soon after posting that I was wrong. ;-) But I've a feeling they have a name too. A captive nut suggests something a bolt goes into rather than a self tapper. http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.aspx?intGroupID=918 None of those are the type I'm thinking of. They're made out of thin strip steel bent to a U shape and clip over a sheet metal edge. -- *Rehab is for quitters. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
What are they called?
on a similar note ... I've seen reference to a special type of threaded
nut, used for quick fastening & unfastening on lengths of studding. The idea is that with a bit of juicious ... tilting, pressing, or whatever, you can slide the nut down most of the length of the studding. Then for the last centimetre or so you tighten it up normally. I'm sure they don't have the full strength of normal nuts but this would be OK for the application I have in mind. Any clues as to what these are called & where I might find some? Ta Jon N Tony Bryer wrote: In article .com, Homer2911 wrote: The sort of thing that goes either side of a sheet metal edge to give a stronger fixing using a self tapping screw and give a degree of adjustability? Common on cars? Nah, I thing those are called 'captive nuts' - different thing I thought they were called spire clips? -- Tony Bryer SDA UK 'Software to build on' http://www.sda.co.uk Free SEDBUK boiler database browser http://www.sda.co.uk/qsedbuk.htm [Latest version QSEDBUK 1.10 released 4 April 2005] |
What are they called?
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
None of those are the type I'm thinking of. They're made out of thin strip steel bent to a U shape and clip over a sheet metal edge. That's a spire nut, innit? (Spire being one of those proprietary names that's acquired generic status.) -- Andy |
What are they called?
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Rumble .@. wrote: I realised soon after posting that I was wrong. ;-) But I've a feeling they have a name too. A captive nut suggests something a bolt goes into rather than a self tapper. http://shop.comdir.co.uk/Products.aspx?intGroupID=918 None of those are the type I'm thinking of. They're made out of thin strip steel bent to a U shape and clip over a sheet metal edge. Aren't they U-nuts (no offence!)? |
What are they called?
In article ,
Chris Bacon wrote: None of those are the type I'm thinking of. They're made out of thin strip steel bent to a U shape and clip over a sheet metal edge. Aren't they U-nuts (no offence!)? I dunno. Think this group is turning into name that nut/tool.;-) -- *Hard work pays off in the future. Laziness pays off now * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
What are they called?
On 1 Dec 2005 08:26:32 -0800, "jkn" wrote:
on a similar note ... I've seen reference to a special type of threaded nut, used for quick fastening & unfastening on lengths of studding. The idea is that with a bit of juicious ... tilting, pressing, or whatever, you can slide the nut down most of the length of the studding. Then for the last centimetre or so you tighten it up normally. Quick nuts. They're just a long threaded nut with a clearance hole drilled through them at a very slight angle. Pigs to make - you need a very rigid drill press, a wedged jig and a stub drill. http://www.axminster.co.uk/name/fram...lamp-20903.htm |
What are they called?
Andy Dingley wrote: On 1 Dec 2005 08:26:32 -0800, "jkn" wrote: on a similar note ... I've seen reference to a special type of threaded nut, used for quick fastening & unfastening on lengths of studding. The idea is that with a bit of juicious ... tilting, pressing, or whatever, you can slide the nut down most of the length of the studding. Then for the last centimetre or so you tighten it up normally. Quick nuts. They're just a long threaded nut with a clearance hole drilled through them at a very slight angle. Pigs to make - you need a very rigid drill press, a wedged jig and a stub drill. http://www.axminster.co.uk/name/fram...lamp-20903.htm Thanks Andy! jon N |
What are they called?
On Thu, 1 Dec 2005 18:32:21 UTC, Andy Wade
wrote: Dave Plowman (News) wrote: None of those are the type I'm thinking of. They're made out of thin strip steel bent to a U shape and clip over a sheet metal edge. That's a spire nut, innit? (Spire being one of those proprietary names that's acquired generic status.) 'Speed nut' is the name I've always used. I guess we could start calling them Clarksons.. -- The information contained in this post is copyright the poster, and specifically may not be published in, or used by Avenue Supplies, http://avenuesupplies.co.uk |
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