Posts: 8,859
Threads: 319
Joined: Feb 2012
Location: Arizona/Minnesota
(02-19-2015, 02:04 PM)DaveH Wrote: (02-19-2015, 01:19 PM)EdK Wrote: I have one of those but I'm not sure how to use it since it doesn't fit down into the thread to measure it.
Ed
Ed,
It doesn't measure the thread, it is for 'measuring' the tip width of the tool that cuts the thread.
DaveH
Yup, I'm realizing that now. It was advertised as being an acme thread gauge which it clearly isn't. I assumed and made an ass out of me. Time to order the proper acme thread gauges.
Ed
Posts: 3,003
Threads: 51
Joined: Apr 2012
Location: Ontario
Don't think they'd help you Ed. Its 10 tpi so the metric one probably wouldn't fit down into the threads enough to check the angles if it is metric. Grind a piece of sheet metal to fit the gauge you have, if it fits the lead screw its standard acme, if not use a protector to get 30 get and see if it fits.
Free advice is worth exactly what you payed for it.
Greg
Posts: 8,859
Threads: 319
Joined: Feb 2012
Location: Arizona/Minnesota
(02-19-2015, 06:07 PM)f350ca Wrote: Don't think they'd help you Ed. Its 10 tpi so the metric one probably wouldn't fit down into the threads enough to check the angles if it is metric. Grind a piece of sheet metal to fit the gauge you have, if it fits the lead screw its standard acme, if not use a protector to get 30 get and see if it fits.
That's my task for this weekend. Make some sheet metal gauges and get this thread figured out so I can move on.
Ed
Posts: 4,683
Threads: 93
Joined: Feb 2012
Location: Perth, Australia
There is a difference between a screw cutting gauge and a screw pitch gauge. I'd follow Greg's suggestion.
Hunting American dentists since 2015.