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Senior Member
That's An Easy One
The I.R.S.!!! They have managed to screw each and everyone of us and have been doing so generation after generation right out of the gate...
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Senior Member
 Originally Posted by Sharp shooter
You belong in this boat man! lol

That would be one sweet deal, I'd drink an 18 pack of original to run that deal up the river.
Believe 1/2 of what you see and nothing of what you hear. 
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Senior Member
I'm going to nominate the Colt SAA, .45 caliber
CH3NO2
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Senior Member
 Originally Posted by Stainless
I'm going to nominate the Colt SAA, .45 caliber
CH3NO2
Same for the Colt .45 auto pistol
CH3NO2
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Senior Member
The Colt 1911 has a flaw. The trigger lock safety could be better placed.
this is probably the best example I know of.
Thread root diameter and angle of the thread cut(not the pitch) hasn't changed in 150 plus years. All threads, whether metric, Whitworth, or SAE, course and fine, all follow the same basic engineering that was layout almost 2 centuries ago, and it hasn't been improved upon. Methods to from threads have improved, but the geometry has remained the same.
Even the thread pitch(threads per inch) is very similar throughout the world. They may call it threads per millimeter, but the count is extremely close. You can duplicate most metric threads on a American made lath using preset thread settings.
Westernearo may be able clarify that. But this has remain unchanged pretty much since the day one.
A nut from the civil war will thread on a bolt made today.
Last edited by gn7; 01-25-2014 at 05:19 PM.
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Senior Member
Everything is pretty much all about the nuts and bolts.
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 Originally Posted by gn7
The Colt 1911 has a flaw. The trigger lock safety could be better placed.
this is probably the best example I know of.
Thread root diameter and angle of the thread cut(not the pitch) hasn't changed in 150 plus years. All threads, whether metric, Whitworth, or SAE, course and fine, all follow the same basic engineering that was layout almost 2 centuries ago, and it hasn't been improved upon. Methods to from threads have improved, but the geometry has remained the same.
Even the thread pitch(threads per inch) is very similar throughout the world. They may call it threads per millimeter, but the count is extremely close. You can duplicate most metric threads on a American made lath using preset thread settings.
Westernearo may be able clarify that. But this has remain unchanged pretty much since the day one.
A nut from the civil war will thread on a bolt made today.

Nice job Bob. The only thing I would change about what you said is metric threads aren't designated by threads per millimeter per say. Metric thread pitch is a crest to crest measurement. So a 13mm x 2.0 means the threads are spaced 2.0mm apart. Multiply 2.0 by .03937 is .0787", so your feed rate on a lathe would be .0787.
Last edited by WESTERNAERO; 01-26-2014 at 07:43 AM.
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Senior Member
A Real Math Question
 Originally Posted by WESTERNAERO
Nice job Bob. The only thing I would change about what you said is metric threads aren't designated by threads per millimeter per say. Metric thread pitch is a crest to crest measurement. So a 13mm x 2.0 means the threads are spaced 2.0mm apart. Multiply .75 by .03937 is .0787", so your feed rate on a lathe would be .0787.
How about 2.0 mm divided by 25.4 = .07874 or 25.4 X .07874 = 2mm.
Math Question: What is the square root of "69"??? Eight (Ate) Something... 8.3066
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 Originally Posted by nowski
How about 2.0 mm divided by 25.4 = .07874 or 25.4 X .07874 = 2mm.
Math Question: What is the square root of "69"??? Eight (Ate) Something... 8.3066
Yep, same thing. Some use divide by 25.4 and some use multiply by .03937.
Fixed my earlier post. For some reason I put .75 x .03937, was supposed to be 2.0.
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Skilsaw -77 (especially if you're right handed lol)
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