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DIN 405 / DIN 20400 Acme thread [6] 29° ASME/ANSI B1.5-1988 [7] Metric trapezoidal threads [1] Tr 30° DIN 103 Buttress threads [6] S 45° DIN 2781 German buttress threads [6] S 30° DIN 513 Square threads [1] Sq 0° (parallel) ? Panzergewinde, "steel conduit thread" Pg 80° DIN 40430 British Association (BA) thread: BA 47° 30' = 47.5° BS 93 ...
Knuckle threads with a flat 30 degree flank thread angle are standardized in DIN 405 for inch pitches and diameters ranging from 8 mm to 200 mm. [3] A more recent standard DIN 20400 uses metric thread pitch and lists diameters from 10 mm to 300 mm. [4] As DIN is a German organization, many instances of the DIN thread charts [5] write numbers with a comma as the decimal marker.
The included angle characteristic of the cross-sectional shape is often called the thread angle. For most V-threads, this is standardized as 60 degrees, but any angle can be used. The cross section to measure this angle lies on a plane which includes the axis of the cylinder or cone on which the thread is produced.
The Thury thread form had the crests rounded at 1 / 6 p and the roots rounded at 1 / 5 p so the thread angle was close to 47.5° but not exactly. This was simplified in the BA thread definition by defining the thread angle to be 47.5° exactly and the thread form to be symmetrical with a depth of 3 / 5 p.
UTS threads do not usually use the pitch parameter; instead a parameter known as threads per inch (TPI) is used, which is the reciprocal of the pitch. The relationship between the height H and the pitch P is found using the following equation where θ is half the included angle of the thread, in this case 30°: [1]
Definition of lead per ANSI/AGMA 1012-G05 Definition of lead angle per ANSI/AGMA 1012-G05 Depiction of the lead angle of a screw thread. d m is the mean diameter of the screw thread. Lead is the axial advance of a helix or screw during one complete turn (360°) [1] The lead for a screw thread is the axial travel for a single revolution. [2]
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The trapezoidal metric thread form is similar to the Acme thread form, except the thread angle is 30°. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] [ 6 ] It is codified by DIN 103. [ 7 ] While metric screw threads are more prevalent worldwide than imperial threads for triangular thread forms, the imperially sized Acme threads predominate in the trapezoidal thread form.