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Re: [Tigers] Whitworth Threads

To: tigers@autox.team.net, Carmods@aol.com
Subject: Re: [Tigers] Whitworth Threads
From: Tony Somebody <achd73@yahoo.com>
Date: Thu, 15 Oct 2009 10:26:11 -0700 (PDT)
Informative post. THANKS!
TtT

--- On Thu, 10/15/09, Carmods@aol.com <Carmods@aol.com> wrote:

> From: Carmods@aol.com <Carmods@aol.com>
> Subject: [Tigers] Whitworth Threads
> To: tigers@autox.team.net
> Date: Thursday, October 15, 2009, 10:05 AM
> Here is some brief  information
> you all  have wanted to know about
> Whitworth  threads. You will be amazed at how
> interesting a topic this will be at
> your next  party. If you need more detail let me know.
>
> It  is considered by some that the screw thread was
> invented in about 400
> BC by  Archytas of Tarentum (428 BC - 350 BC).
> Archytas is sometimes called
> the founder  of mechanics and was a contemporary of
> Plato. 
> Early  screw threads for fasteners were cut by hand,
> hindering mass
> production  Through the years, increasing demands
> deemed it necessary for them to
> be  factory made. In 1770, Jesse  Ramsden made
> the first satisfactory
> screw-cutting lathe. J and W Wyatt  patented a
> factory  made thread system in 1760
> but the lack of thread standardization made  fastener
> interchangeability
> impossible. 
> To overcome these problems Joseph Whitworth  collected
> sample screws from a
> large number of British workshops and in 1841 
> proposed standardization of 
> the number of threads per inch for various  diameters
> and the angle the
> thread flanks at 55 degrees . His proposals  became
> standard practice in
> Britain in the 1860's.
> Course Whitworth threads called BSW (British  Standard
> Whitworth) from 1/4"
> to 1" are the same threads per inch as UNC  (Unified
> Course) except for the
> 1/2" which is 12 threads per inch for BSW and 13 
> threads per inch for UNC.
>  The major  difference is that the UNC has 60 degrees
> between the thread
> flanks  and a deeper minor diameter.  The 
> BSF (British Standard Fine) thread
> has the same profile as the BSW thread form  but was
> used when a finer pitch
> was required for a given diameter. 
> Except for the  1/2" thread BSW, threads  can be
> modified with a tap or
> chased with a  die to fit a UNC  nuts and bolts.
> Due to varying sizes of taps
> and  dies, try it first to make sure you are satisfied
> with the fit. The
> threads  per inch of BSF (British Std. Fine) 
> have no correlation to UNF 
> (Unified Fine) so they cannot be re-tapped or chased with
> a  die.
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