Did you use a die or a nut?
I have a small bucket with a handful of yet to be determined bolts from Asia, not SAE, not metric, they are who knows what? They are close to a standard thread pitch, but then the error accumulates as you move down the thread.
This is me walking away,,,,,,,head down,,,,,whistling to myself,,,, lol. Besides, some shots are just to easyBe nice you guys......
Almost like taking candy from a baby.....This is me walking away,,,,,,,head down,,,,,whistling to myself,,,, lol. Besides, some shots are just to easy
I would do #1. This way you know that your threads are concentic with the arbour.Foot in mouth all screwed up kid with an empty bucket here....
Well I'm all done the back N forth through Amazon messenger with the seller.
Amazon says they are in the USA, but they conversed with me in French.
I tried to switch the conversation to email, but Amazon stripped my Email address from the chat despite numerous attempts to hide it. Pretty amazing really. Even separating it into components each in a different sentence got caught.
Told them what was wrong. They offered me a 25% discount to keep it.
I declined, reminded them that Amazon would give me 100% to return the product, and said I would keep it and fix it if they gave me 75%. I figured they would counter with 50%.
Instead they just refunded the 75 and told me to keep the arbour. No connection to manufacturing. So that's that.
I tried......
Keeping in mind that what I originally wanted was a small diameter centering arbour for my rotary table that could also be pulled by the stud, I think I have two choices:
1. Turn the end down to a 5/16 fine thread stud or even 1/4-28 if necessary.
2. Drill it out and put a stud in there - prolly a 3/8-24 like it was supposed to be.
In both cases, it will be important to keep the threaded piece concentric to the MT3 taper or the whole exercise is pointless.
Which would you choose and why?
Other ideas?
I would do #1. This way you know that your threads are concentic with the arbour.
If you do #2 by drilling and tapping, it introduces a lot of variances. Is the hole straight?; is the tapped threads straight?, is the threaded rod true?
If you needed to have a 3/8-24, I would drill and tap the arbour to a 1/2"-13; red loctite a long enough bolt into it; wait 'til the loctite is fully cured; then turn and thread to 3/8"-24.
They say it's a Schraeder valve tap but .305 sure ain't 6.2mm.Here's another one for you:
I wish my name was Schrader. He invented a bastard thread and managed to get it accepted as a standard world wide. His thread is 7.2mm x 32 TPI. 50% of all vehicles in the world use a schrader valve. I have wanted to find a tap for this thread and it is closely guarded and not for sale.