p38arover
20th September 2024, 08:38 PM
Many people who don’t know engineering history are dismissive of Whitworth threads, nut, and bolts.
Joseph Whitworth created a standardised series of threads for industry where there was no existing standard.
Many are confused by the dimension on the spanners and how the across flat dimension was determined. The spanner markings refer to the diameter of the bolt shank.
The across flats distance of the original Whitworth nuts is based on a mathematical relationship o the bolt shank diameter. It is √3 x the diameter, i.e., 1.732 x the diameter. Why √3? It relates to the hexagon size.
I read somewhere many years ago that BSW (British Standard Whitworth) came about during WW2 to save steel by reducing the amount of metal in the nut and bolt head size. This is why you will see old spanners with just a dimension and W, e.g., 1/4W and later spanners with, say, 1/4BSW markings.
You might find this interesting:
https://youtu.be/l9kezk84_I4'si=wfv5xsLiy4gzcFJs
Joseph Whitworth created a standardised series of threads for industry where there was no existing standard.
Many are confused by the dimension on the spanners and how the across flat dimension was determined. The spanner markings refer to the diameter of the bolt shank.
The across flats distance of the original Whitworth nuts is based on a mathematical relationship o the bolt shank diameter. It is √3 x the diameter, i.e., 1.732 x the diameter. Why √3? It relates to the hexagon size.
I read somewhere many years ago that BSW (British Standard Whitworth) came about during WW2 to save steel by reducing the amount of metal in the nut and bolt head size. This is why you will see old spanners with just a dimension and W, e.g., 1/4W and later spanners with, say, 1/4BSW markings.
You might find this interesting:
https://youtu.be/l9kezk84_I4'si=wfv5xsLiy4gzcFJs