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Obscure gearstick thread...?


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One of the joys(?) of owning a 60 year old car, is finding the unique changes made by POs.

Wanting to change the gear knob it soon became clear the thread was not the standard 7/16 x32TPI ME or even the later more common 5/16 x 18TPI UNC.  Lots of measuring and head scratching later I concluded it was probably 7/16 x 20 TPI British Cycle Thread.

Having spent a few quid buying some nuts with this thread from a specialist supplier, I verified this afternoon this is in fact the thread on the gearstick. Given the difficulty in tracking down these nuts seems like a pretty obscure choice for a replacement thread (or do I just have an obscure gearstick / gearbox?).

Now to track down a tap...

Miles

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Hi Miles,

 you appear to have it all ocnfused.

As stated by Rob 7/16 x 20tpi is UNF

7/16 British Cycle thread is 26 TPI is the norm  but 20tpi can be obtained but for very odd uses.

When dabbling with TRiumph stuff always opt for the cheapest variety  UNF not Cycle.

Roger

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14 hours ago, MilesA said:

One of the joys(?) of owning a 60 year old car, is finding the unique changes made by POs.

Wanting to change the gear knob it soon became clear the thread was not the standard 7/16 x32TPI ME or even the later more common 5/16 x 18TPI UNC.  Lots of measuring and head scratching later I concluded it was probably 7/16 x 20 TPI British Cycle Thread.

Having spent a few quid buying some nuts with this thread from a specialist supplier, I verified this afternoon this is in fact the thread on the gearstick. Given the difficulty in tracking down these nuts seems like a pretty obscure choice for a replacement thread (or do I just have an obscure gearstick / gearbox?).

Now to track down a tap...

Miles

Tracy Tools, Torquay.  Everything on their website and fast delivery.

Ralph

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Well, I have two 7/16 x 20tpi taps and neither fits the nuts I bought which do fit the gearstick. Also, none of the common 7/16 nuts I have fit the gearstick otherwise I would not have had to look for anything different! Surely if 7/16 x 20tpi was the same as UNF then the nuts I have would not need to be manufactured. Difficult to argue with the physical evidence.

It has been suggested that the angle of the thread on BSC is different to equivalent UNF. 

Miles

Edited by MilesA
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2 minutes ago, Ralph Whitaker said:

Tracy Tools, Torquay.  Everything on their website and fast delivery.

Ralph

Thank Ralph. Tracked them down last night and ordered a 7/16 x 20tpi  BSC tap. We will see...

Miles

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3 minutes ago, MilesA said:

Well, I have two 7/16 x 20tpi taps and neither fits the bolts I bought which do fit the gearstick. Difficult to argue with the physical evidence.

It has been suggested that the angle of the thread on BSC is different to equivalent UNF. 

Miles

I am not saying that yours is the same, but I had to extend the thread on my gearstick to accept the saloon gearknob with the overdrive switch built in, and mine was 1/2 inch x 20 tpi, not 7/16th.

Ralph

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I thought the TR3 gear lever thread was fairly coarse, possibly UNC ?   I say this because at one point I was thinking of fitting a Saloon gear knob with the overdrive switch. That had a finer thread, so I ran a suitable die down the gear lever to "override" the existing thread. In the event, I did not use the saloon one, but now have a wooden one with a metal insert which I made, & threaded to match the new thread on the lever.

I can measure what I have today & report back.

Bob.

Edited by Lebro
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10 minutes ago, Ralph Whitaker said:

I am not saying that yours is the same, but I had to extend the thread on my gearstick to accept the saloon gearknob with the overdrive switch built in, and mine was 1/2 inch x 20 tpi, not 7/16th.

Ralph

Apologies, I have just been and checked and you are right about it being 7/16ths Miles, but I am da---d if I can find the die I used.

Ralph

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Hi Miles ,

 

you have found an oddity. The 7/16 CE thread is very much the same as the 7/16 UNF except the core diameter.  The CE is 0.008" bigger than the  UNF.

Also if the gearstick is chrome plated that will also add to the core diameter.

So you may have a UNF thread with too much chrome. Or you have infact a CE thread - but that wouldn;t make sense.

If you have 7/16unf die - run it down the thread so that a UNF nut will then fit.

Roger

Edited by RogerH
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Just checked mine.  7/16" dia, X 20 TPI  which is 7/16" UNF.

So I believe the original TR thread was coarser than this probably UNC at 14 TPI.    Perhaps someone before you has done what I have to mine ?

Edited by Lebro
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15 minutes ago, Lebro said:

I thought the TR3 gear lever thread was fairly coarse, possibly UNC ?   I say this because at one point I was thinking of fitting a Saloon gear knob with the overdrive switch. That had a finer thread, so I ran a suitable die down the gear lever to "override" the existing thread. In the event, I did not use the saloon one, but now have a wooden one with a metal insert which I made, & threaded to match the new thread on the lever.

I can measure what I have today & report back.

Bob.

Found the invoice for the tap and die I bought, and you are right Bob, my thread was 7/16 x 32 tpi and I bought ME (model engineer).

Ralph

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25 minutes ago, Ralph Whitaker said:

Found the invoice for the tap and die I bought, and you are right Bob, my thread was 7/16 x 32 tpi and I bought ME (model engineer).

Ralph

Just to convince myself here it is screwed on to the gearstick. Only just seen that it is stamped WF, don`t know what that is but it was supplied as Model Engineer.

So there are at least 3 different threads then depending on the age of the part, 7/16x32 ME, 5/16x18 UNC, & 7/16x20 UNF.

Ralph

20210111_093814.jpg

Edited by Ralph Whitaker
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My understanding is that the only correct thread on the top of the sidescreen gearstick is 7/16 x 32tpi.

Certainly, that's been the case with all of the gearboxes I've seen over the years.

Of course, anything could have happened over the years......

David

Edited by david ferry
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5 minutes ago, RogerH said:

I wonder what medication the chief gearstick thread cutter was on at the time.

 

Roger 

None - that’s the problem ........

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You could spend a while searching here...

 

https://www.gewinde-normen.de/en/iso-coarse-thread.html

 

Could be M11 x 1.25 which is closest I can work out to 7/16 x 20

I agree the standard TR gearstick threads are 7/16 x 32 ME for sidescreen cars with the straight stick and 5/16 UNC x 18 for the bent stick on wind up window cars.  The Stag Innsbruck bent stick for overdrive switched knob is different again. (Unless it is my sidescreen car that has a bent but truncated TR5 gearstick that I turned to size & threaded  7/16 x 32 ME.)

 

Miles, unless you have just had your gear stick re-chromed why not request one on here?  I will check my own stock for you. - could turn out cheaper than a special cycle thread tap.

Cheers

Peter W

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Why not run a 7/16"UNF die down the gear lever, & a 7/16"UNF tap into the the gear knob, then it must fit.

I am persueded that my original gear lever was 32 TPI, & I re-threaded it to 20 TPI to match the Saloon knob (which in the end I did not use)

Bob.

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Oh dear. I hadn't intended to stir up a hornets nest; rather just report an odd thread on my gearstick - probably applied by a PO. 

Like most others, my understanding was that the thread on a 3A gearstick was 7/16 x 32 ME. My replacement 3A knob presumably has that thread but did not fit which is what started my quest.

So last night as part of my daily exercise I walked to the lockup to reconfirm the physical evidence.

There is no chrome on the gearstick thread in fact quite a lot missing along the whole stick! None of the following would fit: 7/16 UNF die, 7/16 UNF and UNC nuts. The only nut that slipped on easily was the 7/16 x 20 tipi British Cycle Thread nut I had bought.

So I think it is clear that 7/16 x 20 UNF is not compatible with 7/16 x 20 tipi British Cycle Thread. As the evidence suggest and Roger speculates there is something slightly different about the two. Interestingly I have had an exchange with the specialist nut supplier. Even he thought 7/16 x 20 UNF was compatible with 7/16 x 20 tipi British Cycle Thread nuts he supplied but he later confirmed having tested them that there is a difference.

Overall not a big deal but an interesting insight into the wide range of engineering standards that evolved over the past 150 years in order to confuse an bewilder us desk jockeys: Whitworth, SAE, UNF, UNC, ME,BSC and so on.

Peter thanks for the offer as ever. The choice is to run a die with the correct thread on the gear stick as Roger suggests or rethread the gear knob. If the tap I have ordered is correct I think I will I have a go at filling the knob void with JB Weld and tapping it. If I cock it up - always a high risk in my case - I will not have done to much damage! 

As for how it got threaded in this way - who knows: Friday afternoon car or more likely a careless PO.

Anyway, thanks for all the interest as always.

Miles

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Hi Miles,

as mentioned - the UNF thread has bigger/deeper threads (tip to core) than the Cycle thread (shallower) so this would stop the the UNF running down.

The CEI20 thread is non standard, and having a much shallower thread depth allows a hole down the middle of the shaft to be slightly bigger than that allowed by the UNF equivalent.

This is a good table  All Threads

 

Roger

Edited by RogerH
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Just to throw some more in the mix....

I went through my ME taps and dies today (as you do) and found a die  marked 7/16” x 20 ME.   So that’s a weird one.  It confused me as I thought I only had 7/16” x 32 ME.

Peter W

Edited by BlueTR3A-5EKT
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Very odd Peter, I was under the impression that ME threads only came in 32 or 40 tpi.  None of the tables I have list a 20 tpi ME thread. 

 

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