What would you suggest and why ?
Thanks
Thanks
What would you suggest and why ?
Thanks
I prefer a 3/8 x 10 pin both the regular and the modern. (cracking open can O worms) Radial pins seem to flex unlike the 3/8 x 10 to me.
Brian
I'd wager that nobody can actually feel the difference between the two. They have it in their heads that they can, have convinced themselves, have bought into some kind of propaganda...they have sipped that Kool-aid and then guzzled the pitcher.
Here is what I know:
The 3/8-10 is a pin that has been around for a long time. The threads on it are based on machine threads used for actual assemblies (you know, minor stuff like keeping the wheels on your car and keeping planes together).
Radial is a thread developed by a guy who looked at the drive screws on his equipment and thought it looked neat-o.
Radial screws really are the AMC Gremlin of current cue building. Your gramma and a bunch of people think they are cool, but in a few years that stupid fad will pass and people will go back to something based in, uhm, actual engineering.
dld-->can't wait for the day that people actually figure out that all of these gimmick threads are actually gimmicks.
Are we arrogant or what ?If you are going to talk screws, at least take the thirty-second beginner course and learn that the 'small' diameter is called the 'minor' diameter. We have a vocabulary for a reason.
I've never seen a 3/8-10 thread worn out. I've seen them damaged due to abuse, but never worn out.
From an engineering standpoint, the 3/8 radial should bend less, but is a moot point. If the screw is flexing, there is something majorly wrong.
Screws are made to provide axial force. The friction caused by the axial force is used to react the shear forces caused by a force or moment on an assembly.
dld
What would you suggest and why ?
Thanks