Matata
Well-Known Member
I have a six mm hole on the side of my honda....doing the thermostat...long storey. for a new bolt I was going to simply tap 7mm . Why is this size so uncommon. 8mm is too big, not enough meat around it. Ta Nik
I was going to simply tap 7mm . Why is this size so uncommon.
Well bugger me sideways with a barge pole if The Tap and Die Company http://www.tap-die.com/index.html based in London, does not have the 7mm tap and die requested, guess the OP does not need kiwi luck after all.Good luck with the 7 mm tap
If the thread is stripped it might be cheaper to Helicoil it. The metric kits are very inexpensive now and you will have some spares for any future shenanigans.
I have a six mm hole on the side of my honda....doing the thermostat...long storey. for a new bolt I was going to simply tap 7mm . Why is this size so uncommon. 8mm is too big, not enough meat around it. Ta Nik
Problem with a 6mm helicoil insert, as suggested, is that the hole will have to be tapped to nearly 8mm. major dia. OP says that there isn't enough metal for that.
The only 7mm screws I've come across were on a Peugeot car, I can't remember which bit, I only remember it took ages to find some replacements
Its part of the "round numbers" mentality that we all have inc design engineers. If you look at a set of design drawings you will see most dimensions given in what the designer sees as standard sizes. You will see things made symetrical when function doesnt require them to be so. Ask yourself why you are thinking of 7mm and not ( say) 7.18mm - the reason is the same one.
Well bugger me sideways with a barge pole if The Tap and Die Company http://www.tap-die.com/index.html based in London, does not have the 7mm tap and die requested, guess the OP does not need kiwi luck after all.
I've never really come across odd numbered BA sizes anywhere except model engineering, where 5BA and 7BA closely approximate to 1/8" and 3/32", hence scale up nicely for old imperial fasteners.I find it mildly interesting that mechanical engineers traditionally use the even numbered BA threads but electrical engineers use the odd numbered ones. Civil engineers just hit things with hammers.
I've never really come across odd numbered BA sizes anywhere except model engineering, where 5BA and 7BA closely approximate to 1/8" and 3/32", hence scale up nicely for old imperial fasteners.
BA is really commercially obsolete.