British Standard Fine (BSF) is a screw thread form, as a fine-pitch alternative to British Standard Whitworth (BSW) thread. It was used for steel bolts and nuts on and in much of Britain's machinery, including cars, prior to adoption of Unified, and later Metric, standards. For highly stressed conditions, especially in motorcycles, a finer thread, British Standard Cycle (BSC), was used as well.
BSF was developed by R. E. B. Crompton, and his assistant George Field.[1][when?] BSF threads use the 55 degree Whitworth thread form. It was introduced by the British Engineering Standards Association in 1908.[2]
The table provides BSF sizes, the threads per inch and spanner jaw sizes. The BSC column indicates where BSF and BSC threads match. The table shows suitable tapping drill sizes. Uncommon sizes are shown in italics.
Table
editDiameter Thread
densityAs
BSC?Nut,
approximateTap drill (in) (mm) (in−1) (mm) (in) 3⁄16 0.19 4.83 32 Yes 8.59 11⁄32 6pt 5⁄32 in 7⁄32 0.22 5.59 28 No 4.6 mm 1⁄4 0.25 6.35 26 Yes 11.30 5.3 mm 5⁄16 0.31 7.87 22 No 13.35 17⁄32 17⁄64 in 3⁄8 0.375 9.53 20 15.24 5⁄8 8.2 mm 7⁄16 0.44 11.18 18 18.03 11⁄16 9.7 mm 1⁄2 0.50 12.70 16 20.83 13⁄16 7⁄16 in 9⁄16 0.56 14.22 16 23.37 15⁄16 1⁄2 in 5⁄8 0.63 16.00 14 25.65 1 6pt 14 mm 11⁄16 0.69 17.53 14 27.94 1+1⁄8 6pt 15.5 mm 3⁄4 0.75 19.05 12 30.48 1+1⁄4 6pt 16.75 mm 7⁄8 0.88 22.35 11 33.02 1+5⁄16 25⁄32 in 1 1.00 25.40 10 37.59 1+1⁄2 22.75 mm 1+1⁄8 18 457.20 9 42.42 1+11⁄16 26.50 mm 1+1⁄4 1.25 31.75 9 47.24 1+7⁄8 28.75 mm 1+1⁄2 1.50 38.10 8 56.39 2+1⁄4 34.50 mm
References
edit- ^ Glanfield, John (2001). The Devil's Chariots. Sutton. p. 87. ISBN 0-7509-4152-9.
- ^ Sidders 1969, p.16
Bibliography
edit- P.A. Sidders, ed. (1969). Guide to World Screw Threads. New York: Industrial Press. ISBN 0-8311-1092-9.
External links
edit- Thread sizes at the Wayback Machine (archived 2018-08-28)
- Jaw sizes for sockets and spanners/wrenches
- Spanner size chart