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Thread: Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.

  1. #1
    Supporting Member DIYSwede's Avatar
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    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.

    So - I needed to cut a 12 TPI thread (for a stack of homebrewed 38 DP 20PA gear cutting hobs) on my mini-lathe,
    equipped with a 1,5 mm pitch leadscrew...

    I won't bore you to death with the math involved, just state the obvious: The inch to mm ratio is 1" to 25,4 mm.
    Hence some sort of gear wheel setup in the lathe should provide just that ratio, but as the module for the gears are 1,
    a 254 tooth gear would be too "maxi", at least for my mini lathe.
    Some kind of divisor for the gear was called for, and quickly halving the 254 gives me 127
    (which at 134 mm+/ over 5"1/4 OD still is a bit too big to slip in).
    Here my figuring came to a grinding halt, as I realized (apart from you guys, knowing that all along)
    that 127 unfortunately is a prime number*. Dang.

    -What could be "close enough for comfort", then?
    Thinking that "-Being such a powerful stimulant, Spreadsheets isn't merely reserved for the Upper class!", I did this:

    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.-12-ish-tpi-household-lathe-setup.jpg

    Being a simple mind - I also provided the stage gain ratios, the error involved, and its devastating consequences.
    Thus you've been warned.

    Now - not all these combos are fitting or suitable - the least cumbersome (but perhaps not ideal for "gain distribution")
    is the 80-45/50-63 one,which will just fit within the gear cover,
    although I also realize that the awkward stock banjo needs a new project of its own...

    After getting some help from a student in whipping out a 63 T gear from our (then) new 3D printer at work,
    I thought I had solved it.
    (Here some of you "Math Reductionists" might wonder why I didn't just went for a small 21 T instead?
    Just 1/3 size dia compared to a Biggie 63 T?
    -Not being quite sure if the printer was "good enough", thus minimizing any errors to 1/3 of what a 21 T would accomplish.)
    -Voila:

    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.-12-tpi-change-gear-household-lathe.jpg

    As all you wise guys already have seen - I have clumsily turned the 45/50 idlers over, and this config will instead give me a 14,82 TPI...
    The nosy ones also probably realized that the spindle hand crank is just an old bike pedal crank with a re-run bakelite handle,
    but also that I simply couldn't resist fitting a fused mains switch with a multi outlet strip for lighting & peripherals too...
    And what the heck is the lathe sitting on in the pic below?
    Unintentional pun: To those of you, I (not being a Doctor either) just humbly say "Be patient."

    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.-imperial-thread-gear-setup-80-45-50-63.jpg

    -Now, that's better! And how did it perform? Check for yourself:

    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.-38-dp-20-pa-14-mm-od-mild-steel-hob-test.jpg

    OK - it's just a proof-of-concept hob made outta scrap steel (discarded office hole punch), but the meshing is apparent.
    Next up is threading the 14 mm dia silver steel shank from a discarded 500 mm gas spring,
    (from which also the tube is used for a 25 dia by 350 mm mold, for casting my own AlSi12 round stock- yet another upcoming project post).
    Then slitting, milling, relieving, hardening and finally grinding the hobs-to-be.
    Guess it'll be good enough for a card-carrying Swedish Cheapskate?

    *Mandatory Math Test: "-As you all already know, the number 13 333 513 is a prime,
    but this number is also the sum of two other primes - which ones?"

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    Last edited by DIYSwede; Jul 3, 2019 at 12:43 AM. Reason: Metric/ Imperial unit mixup

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    bigtrev8xl (May 31, 2019), Jon (Jun 6, 2019), shopandmath (Aug 16, 2019), volodar (May 30, 2019)

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    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DIYSwede View Post
    *Mandatory Math Test: "-As you all already know, the number 13 333 513 is a prime,
    but this number is also the sum of two other primes - which ones?"
    13333513 is an odd number. All the prime numbers except 2 are odd. If you add two odd numbers, you always obtain an even number.

    So, one of the numbers in the sum must be 2. Therefore,

    13333513 = 2 + 13333511

    A quick check with the factoring program I wrote says 13333511 is indeed prime, as do other programs on the web.

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    Regards, Marv

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    DIYSwede (May 30, 2019), Paul Jones (May 31, 2019), volodar (May 30, 2019)

  5. #3
    Supporting Member DIYSwede's Avatar
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    -Good morning, Marv!
    Excellent deduction, as always, and not really surprised that you'd be the first.

    Respect, and a tip to the hat for your project posts, kind remarks and good humor in making this place so great!

    Johan

    "This might seem simple, but wait 'til I've explained!"

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    Thanks DIYSwede! We've added your Lathe Threading Gears to our Lathe Accessories category,
    as well as to your builder page: DIYSwede's Homemade Tools. Your receipt:




  7. #5
    Supporting Member DIYSwede's Avatar
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    Cutting threads of ETERNAL & HUMAN values on FALSE & ATHEISTIC lathes.

    Starting out with the front page of this
    self-evident, moderate and objective account on:

    Inferial Measures Vs. Metrification

    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.-defence-sacred-measures.jpg

    http://www.dozenalsociety.org.uk/metrix/sacred.html

    -Now, when that's over with, back to business...

    As there might be a few (other) heretics out there who'll want to turn their own Satanic Mills,
    then this (Oh - NO! Another Spreadsheet, again!) might be crucial for your excommunication:

    Imperial threads on a Metric lathe.-inferial-treads-metric-lathe.jpg

    NOTE: Gears for 1,5 mm pitch leadscrew only.

    -Any questions? (Except: Directions for Jerusalem will NOT be answered)

    Cheers, Johan
    Last edited by DIYSwede; Aug 14, 2019 at 03:57 AM.

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    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
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    I got several paragraphs into that typically verbose, convoluted, inflated - my reservoir of nasty adjectives fails me - junk before remembering Dorothy Parker's advice: This is not an article to be tossed aside lightly. It should be thrown with great force.

    One thing it does seem to get right. In most of the "Inferial vs. Metric" arguments in which I've been involved, the inferial proponents do view their "screwed-up, made on the spot with no thought or pattern" units as sacred religious objects whose imagined value lies in their antiquity rather than their sensibility but refuse to admit it, instead manufacturing imaginary benefits of a system they themselves seldom understand.
    ---
    Regards, Marv

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    DIYSwede (Aug 14, 2019)

  10. #7
    Supporting Member DIYSwede's Avatar
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    Thanks again, Marv! You didn't find any mistakes in my spreadsheet math above, per chance?

    BTW: I frequently post at another mech site, with pretty harsh, jingoistic and inconsistent "arguments"
    against the Metric System, Brussels and Globalization. -Yeah...

    Sometimes I put some metrology info up in my tiny gallery there.
    Q: -Would you mind my putting up a screenshot of, and a link to your essay:
    http://www.homemadetools.net/forum/g...1486#post93973
    "Some things you should think about..." in there*?

    ATB, Johan

    * My folder: "Imperial Measures Ephemera". Imperial measures ephemera - Meccano Gallery

  11. #8
    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by DIYSwede View Post
    Thanks again, Marv! You didn't find any mistakes in my spreadsheet math above, per chance?

    BTW: I frequently post at another mech site, with pretty harsh, jingoistic and inconsistent "arguments"
    against the Metric System, Brussels and Globalization. -Yeah...

    Sometimes I put some metrology info up in my tiny gallery there.
    Q: -Would you mind my putting up a screenshot of, and a link to your essay:
    http://www.homemadetools.net/forum/g...1486#post93973
    "Some things you should think about..." in there*?

    ATB, Johan

    * My folder: "Imperial Measures Ephemera". Imperial measures ephemera - Meccano Gallery
    I would be flattered to have you quote that article anywhere you like.

    Most of the time when I get involved in one of those metric versus inferial discussions, my remarks tend toward to the acidic as my irritation with the old inferial Luddites rises. As a counter to this I wrote the referenced article in a calm moment trying to capture all the really logical reasons to use metric. Doing so allows me to quote it before the acid rises and my frustration with the medieval types sets in.

    I'd be interested to see any responses to it. A Meccano forum probably has many British members and, considering the UK's reluctance to convert to metric, I would expect some spectacularly illogical arguments against doing so. It would provide an interesting counterpoint to the spectacularly illogical Usonian arguments I've encountered.
    ---
    Regards, Marv

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    I just checked out your website
    Loads of interesting math Programs to help with common Shop problems
    You have Done excellent job on the website
    I’m going to recommend the site to my students for resources
    Ray

  13. #10
    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by shopandmath View Post
    I just checked out your website
    Loads of interesting math Programs to help with common Shop problems
    You have Done excellent job on the website
    I’m going to recommend the site to my students for resources
    Ray
    Thanks for the kind words, Ray.

    Tell your students that the programs demonstrate why they should learn math. They show the type of real world problems that can be solved with math - especially so in the machine shop.
    ---
    Regards, Marv

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