Good idea... but where to find imperial bolts Pete! Sure I don't have any lieing around.If you can't find someone to make the point for you look for a bolt that fits the thread that isn't threaded all the way to the head. Cut the head off and chuck it in a drill and present the spinning bolt to a bench grinder. It won't take long to shape it. You can clean up the marks with sandpaper.
Pete
Should this be a one time deal, and you decide to try as Inspector suggests, (the finer wheel works much nicer)@Inspector guessing the thread is ...?(help anyone) some older imperial UK thread. I don't have the tools
to measure pitch etc.
The brass inserts are not quite in 'square'. I've slimmed it down, now fits. Except. I now need a pencil
<7mm diameter, a 'slim' golfers pencil.
UNC? Dunno. Whitworth sounds much more likely (but a guess). British Standard Whitworth - Wikipedia
I'll pull the other one and *try* to measure pitch and depth.
Overall that might be useful to someone with some existing knowledge (so that they can ignore the obvious errors) but there are a few bad referencies - close to the end he suggests that BSPT & NTP threads are interchangable !!! He does then say that the flank angles are different but doesn't make it clear that that fact alone makes them non-interchangable. Even PTFE tape wouldn't help to make a gas-tight joint with such a marriage.This youtube video helped me understand the differences and how to measure threads. UK bias perhaps.
Thanks for the kind offer Dave.If you are happy to put it in the post to Essex, I can do this for you. Send me a pm for the address.
Dave T
Possible John.Looking closer at the last pic I would say it’s BSW…and probably 1/4” if the 6mm is a sloppy fit. UNC would fit…
There is no 7/32 BSW in the BS 84 : 1956 standard -- There is a 'non prefered' 7/32 dia. in the BSF series at 28tpi.Possible John.
24 tpi, 5.5mm diameter body of the point?
BSW 24 tpi 7/32matches though. Tapping drill is 4.5mm, seems to match?
(Why is nothing 'easy' )
There is on the chart I have.There is no 7/32 BSW in the BS 84 : 1956 standard -- There is a 'non prefered' 7/32 dia. in the BSF series at 28tpi.
OK. Understood. (guess) it's 50-100 yo?That does not mean that the thread couldn't be 7/32 x 24 Whitworth - it's just not BSW!
I counted the tpi... I can't count in mm I measured in mm.Why do you state the diameter in mm but the pitch in TPI ??
Yes, according to my micrometer.Is the diameter of the thread really 5.5mm? (0.21653") or is it 0.216"? - which might indicate a N° 12 UNC which is 24 tpi even though 0.216" is the nominal dia. in fact a N° 12 UNC thread is more likely to be smaller than 0.216".
Not impossible?7/32" is in fact 0.21875" so it would be reasonable to assume that this is nominally a 7/32" thread but at 24 tpi would be a non-standard.
I agree. Age would tend to agree with that conclusion (apart from which I can't measure the pitch accurately enough)It seems unlikely that it is a metric thread since the rare occsion that 5.5mm dia. is listed in a 'Standard' it is only in the Fine pitch series at 0.5mm - 24 tpi could be a mis-measure of 1mm but never 0.5mm!
I didn't suggest it might be (according to the table I have).At 24 tpi it also cannot be 1/4" Whit. form - BSW is 20 tpi and BSF is 26 tpi - and 5.5mm OD would be very much undersize.
No - John Hall did (Reply #16) I just tacked that on the end as an afterthoughtI didn't suggest it might be (according to the table I have).
YMMV
Do you not have a 'Thread Pitch Gauge' ? The difference between 24tpi and 1mm is palpable with well made sets. If you have one such as shown in the referenced Video then maybe not as muchpe2dave said:(apart from which I can't measure the pitch accurately enough)
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