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  2. Key (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Key_(engineering)

    Introducing an additional bushing component between hub and shaft improves the performance and convenience of keyed joints. Taper-Lock bushings are keyed hub fittings which provide three threaded Dutch keyways and two setscrews as Dutch keys, in addition to the rectangular keyway. The Dutch keyways are threaded only on the alternate hub side or ...

  3. Machine taper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine_taper

    The rate of taper is 1:20 on diameter, in other words 0.600" on diameter per foot, .050" on diameter per inch. Tapers range from a Number 2 to a Number 20. The diameter of the big end in inches is always the taper size divided by 8, the small end is always the taper size divided by 10 and the length is the taper size divided by 2.

  4. Taper pin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taper_pin

    A taper pin is a fastener used in mechanical engineering. They are steel rods with one end having a slightly larger diameter than the other. Metric taper pins have a taper of 1:50. [1] A 1:50 taper means that one end of a 50 mm long bar will be 1 mm smaller in diameter than the other end.

  5. List of DIN standards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_DIN_standards

    Spring lock washers with square ends or tang ends ... sizes for taper screw limit plug gauges for parallel internal thread ... pipe bushings, service shafts and ducts ...

  6. Plain bearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plain_bearing

    A flanged bushing is a sleeve bushing with a flange at one end extending radially outward from the OD. The flange is used to positively locate the bushing when it is installed or to provide a thrust bearing surface. [9] Sleeve bearings of inch dimensions are almost exclusively dimensioned using the SAE numbering system.

  7. Chuck (engineering) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chuck_(engineering)

    The chuck may be held against the taper with a threaded retainer ring (large thin nut), typically wrenched with a spanner wrench of the pin or hook variety. The peak of popularity for building this type of spindle nose was the 1940s and 1950s. The chuck may be held against the taper with cam-lock posts that wedge into a stuck-fast position.

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