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Essjay001 August 1st 03 01:27 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 
Nigel Mercier ® wrote:
Can anyone help me identify a bolt thread?

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392"
(so it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.

What is it, and where can I get a bolt with this thread?


2 BA ish



August 1st 03 02:08 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 

"Nigel Mercier ®" wrote in message
...
Can anyone help me identify a bolt thread?

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392" (so
it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.

What is it, and where can I get a bolt with this thread?


It is M10 x 1.0mm - a non-preferred BS size. You can get the bolts from most
good industrial fastener suppliers, but you are likely to run into minimum
order quantities or charges if you only want one.

Colin Bignell



Dave Baker August 1st 03 02:10 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 
Subject: Identify a bolt thread
From: Nigel Mercier ®
Date: 01/08/03 13:03 GMT Daylight Time
Message-id:

Can anyone help me identify a bolt thread?

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392" (so
it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.

What is it, and where can I get a bolt with this thread?


The std 10mm pitch is 1.50mm which you'd know if you looked up a bolt pitch
chart on Google or had a Zeus book. 1mm is a fine thread pitch used for special
bolts such as big end bolts and flywheel bolts in engines. But as you don't say
what this bolt is off.....

Dave Baker - Puma Race Engines (
www.pumaracing.co.uk)
"How's life Norm?"
"Not for the squeamish, Coach" (Cheers, 1982)


Andy Dingley August 1st 03 02:32 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 
On Fri, 01 Aug 2003 13:03:23 +0100, Nigel Mercier ®
wrote:

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392" (so
it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.


10mm fine. Most of the larger metrics are fairly common in both a
standard and a fine pitch. 1.25 is the usual alternative to the 1.5
coarse pitch, but 1.0 is a standard too.

If the diameter really is 10mm, then it's probably metric - there's no
obvious imperial size close to that.

Is the bolt head marked ?


Rick Hughes August 1st 03 05:16 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 

"Nigel Mercier ®" wrote in message
...
Can anyone help me identify a bolt thread?

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392" (so
it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.

What is it, and where can I get a bolt with this thread?


There is Metric Coarse and Metric fine

You need to give the tpi and the root diameter to identify it correctly.

Rick



Frisket August 1st 03 06:20 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 

"Nigel Mercier ®" wrote in message
...

You need to give the tpi and the root diameter to identify it correctly.


I thought I had given this info, but in metric.
--
Nigel Mercier


Hi Nigel, if you go to a local factors and talk nicely to the storeman he
may just oblige and find a nut that'll run down the thread thus identifying
it and providing a new bolt at the same time. Richard.



Steven Pilbeam August 1st 03 06:53 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 

"Nigel Mercier ®" wrote in message
...
Can anyone help me identify a bolt thread?

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392" (so
it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.

What is it, and where can I get a bolt with this thread?


--
Nigel Mercier

Please remove NOSPAM from my return address


Try http://www.namrick.co.uk



Essjay001 August 2nd 03 01:37 AM

Identify a bolt thread
 
nightjar wrote:
"Essjay001" wrote in message
...
Nigel Mercier ® wrote:
Can anyone help me identify a bolt thread?

On my imperial steam driven micrometer, the diameter measures 0.392"
(so it's 10mm) and the pitch is 1mm. So muggings here assumes it's a
standard 10mm bolt thread, but having bought one it is much coarser.

What is it, and where can I get a bolt with this thread?

2 BA ish


2BA is about 4.7mm diameter and BA pitches are 0.9mm ^ BA number, so
its pitch is 0.81mm.

Thanks, it was just an off the top of my head suggestion.



Essjay001 August 2nd 03 01:42 AM

Identify a bolt thread
 
Phil Addison wrote:
On Fri, 1 Aug 2003 18:20:44 +0100, "Frisket"
wrote:


"Nigel Mercier ®" wrote in
message ...

You need to give the tpi and the root diameter to identify it
correctly.

I thought I had given this info, but in metric.
--
Nigel Mercier


Hi Nigel, if you go to a local factors and talk nicely to the
storeman he may just oblige and find a nut that'll run down the
thread thus identifying it and providing a new bolt at the same
time. Richard.


Or you read the back posts and look it up inthe reference tables given
less than a month ago.


Oh FFS



Andy Wade August 4th 03 11:10 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 
"John Schmitt" wrote in message ...

The ISO series of threads goes up to 1.25 mm pitch at 10mm, after
it omits 9mm.


No such omission. M9 exists, and so does M7. I've got taps & dies to prove
it :-). They're not commonly used sizes (any more than 7 & 9 BA are) but
they certainly exist.

--
Andy



harrogate August 5th 03 10:34 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 

"Andy Wade" wrote in message
...
"John Schmitt" wrote in message ...

The ISO series of threads goes up to 1.25 mm pitch at 10mm, after
it omits 9mm.


No such omission. M9 exists, and so does M7. I've got taps & dies to

prove
it :-). They're not commonly used sizes (any more than 7 & 9 BA are) but
they certainly exist.

--
Andy



OT

Reminds me of the forger that mistakenly made £9 notes. He puzzled for a
while and then decided to take them to somewhere in deepest Ireland and see
if he could get them changed (pre Euro joke!)

When he got there and handed them to the cashier asking for them to be
changed the question came back

"No problem sir. Would you like them in 7's and 2's or 6's and 3's?"


--
Woody





Andy Wade August 6th 03 12:15 AM

Identify a bolt thread
 
harrogate wrote in message
...

"No problem sir. Would you like them in 7's and 2's or 6's and 3's?"


The oldest ones are still the best, eh?
--
Andy



John Schmitt August 6th 03 04:04 PM

Identify a bolt thread
 
In article ,
"Andy Wade" writes:

The ISO series of threads goes up to 1.25 mm pitch at 10mm, after
it omits 9mm.


No such omission. M9 exists, and so does M7. I've got taps & dies to prove
it :-). They're not commonly used sizes (any more than 7 & 9 BA are) but
they certainly exist.


Duh. My memory is at fault. I knew it was ISO or DIN which
skipped 9mm and indeed quite a lot of integer sizes above that
and thought it was ISO. Can I claim that the hot weather caused
me to mistype DIN in an egregious manner?

John Schmitt


--
If you have nothing to say, or rather, something extremely stupid
and obvious, say it, but in a 'plonking' tone of voice - i.e.
roundly, but hollowly and dogmatically. - Stephen Potter


Andy Wade August 7th 03 11:04 AM

Identify a bolt thread
 
John Schmitt wrote in message
...

Duh. My memory is at fault. I knew it was ISO or DIN which
skipped 9mm and indeed quite a lot of integer sizes above that
and thought it was ISO. Can I claim that the hot weather caused
me to mistype DIN in an egregious manner?


You can claim whatever you like. Whether you are believed is a matter for
the jury...

However, IMHO, the value of having a knowledgeable resident group chemist
far outweighs such minor transgressions, so yes you can be let off (just
this once, mind).

--
Andy




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