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The thread form is slightly modified to increase the minor diameter, and thus the strength of screws and taps. The major diameter still extends to within 1 / 8 H of the theoretical sharp V, but the total depth of the thread is reduced 4% from 5 / 8 H = 5 / 8 cos(30°) P ≈ 0.541P to 0.52P. [5]
Below is the historical thread size table, not to be confused with G threads, which are actually in use as British Standard Pipe. For example a G½ (half inch) is 20.955mm in diameter. For example a G½ (half inch) is 20.955mm in diameter.
Pipe Thread Form ANSI B1.20.3-1976 (R2013) Dryseal Pipe Threads (Inch) Pipe Thread Form ASME B1.20.7-1991 (R2013) Hose Coupling Screw Threads - Inch: Pipe Thread Form ASME B1.21M-1997 (R2013) Metric Screw Threads - MJ Profile: V Thread Form BS 84: Tables of BS Whitworth, BS Fine and BS Pipe Threads: V Thread Form (55°) 1 ⁄ 4 ″-20 BSW ISO ...
Toggle the table of contents. ... American Society of Mechanical Engineers National Pipe Thread Taper (NPT) [5] Nominal pipe size Thread ... 2 + 5 ⁄ 8: 66.6750 3 8 ...
ISO metric threads consist of a symmetric V-shaped thread. In the plane of the thread axis, the flanks of the V have an angle of 60° to each other. The thread depth is 0.54125 × pitch. The outermost 1 ⁄ 8 and the innermost 1 ⁄ 4 of the height H of the V-shape are cut off from the profile.
Toggle the table of contents. ... 11.5: 11.8 3 ⁄ 8: 19: 1.337 0.6560 ... Pipe threads where pressure-tight joints are not made on the threads consists of the ...
Royal Microscopical Society (RMS) thread, also known as society thread, is a special 0.8-inch diameter × 36 thread-per-inch (TPI) Whitworth thread form used for microscope objective lenses. Microphone stands: 5 ⁄ 8-inch 27 threads per inch (TPI) Unified Special thread (UNS, USA and the rest of the world)
Example (metric, fine): For M7.0 × 0.5, 7.0 − 0.5 = 6.5 (The 85% coarse, 90% fine guideline, within its effective range, matches this in net effect) The major minus pitch also works for inch-based threads, but you must first determine the pitch by looking at the number of treads per inch (TPI; for example, 1 ⁄ 20 = 0.050 and 1 ⁄ 13 ≈ 0 ...