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U.S. martial arms were made with metric thread forms up until the adoption of the Krag. The change came when the Norwegians provided the manufacturing plans for the Krag in the inch-system.
Interesting observation but a faulty conclusion. The original martial "patterns" used by the U.S. were the 1766-1770-1771 French muskets using metric thread forms and the metric form continued to be used in U.S. martial arms production. The question becomes "when" did the metric system fade out in U.S. martial arms production? I was lead to believe that the Krag was the 1st fully inch-pattern U.S. martial arm to be adopted. And then, the metric system returned once again with the adoption and production of the M14 and M16.For what it's worth, the Military rifle manufactured by Springfield Arsenal in 1875 that I own uses inch series threads similar to those in common use today.
One of the two lock screws that pass thru the stock to hold the lock in place has threads that measure .187 in diameter. The other one measures .191 in diameter. That is basically 3/16" in size.
Both of these screws have threads that have 27 "threads per inch" spacing. .190 diameter is the nominal size for a #10 screw in the U.S.
The standard #10 screws in use today have either a 24 thread per inch or a 32 thread per inch pitch which makes the Springfield screw's 27 thread per inch pitch a non-standard size.
If these lock screw thread measurements were converted to metric the .187 diameter becomes 4.75 mm and the .191 diameter becomes 4.85 mm. The 27 threads per inch becomes, 0.94 mm. Averaging the diameters and using the .94mm pitch, that would make the metric threads a M4.8-.94 size. The closest metric thread I can find is a M5-0.80 thread.
The tang screw that passes thru the tang and screws into the trigger plate measures .216 in diameter. The thread pitch is 24 threads per inch.
This is a standard #12-24UNC American size screw thread.
A metric equivalent to this thread would be a M5.48-1.06 thread.
During much of the latter 19th century there were no standards for threads but the inch system of measurement in the US had been thoroughly established.
Based on this and the thread measurements I found on my Springfield, I question the idea that metric threads were used on US Military guns prior to the turn of the 20th century.
Hawkeye--Probably the best source in a condensed form are the posts at practicalmachinist.com--a site which really digs down into historical thread forms."Interesting observation but a faulty conclusion."
Rokon, if possible could you direct us to documentation that the US arms had metric threads? That information would have to apply to all US arms at least from the early 1800s through the end of trapdoor production and also apply to all the contract arms provided for the US as the screws (and parts) interchange with Springfield and Harpers Ferry production. I haven't been able to find that information to date but if it exists it would help resolve the issue.
Does that mean that the nipples for my 1841 Mississippi and my 1842 martial pistol Are not 5/16 x24?U.S. martial arms were made with metric thread forms up until the adoption of the Krag. The change came when the Norwegians provided the manufacturing plans for the Krag in the inch-system.
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