| Curt, 
I defer to your experience and knowledge; however, that's what happened to us. 
The U-bolts were previously untouched as far as we could tell, but when we 
tried to thread an SAE fine nut the nut jammed between about 3/4" down the 
thread--yes, we cleaned the threads first, and used new nuts--and when we 
thread-chased the U-bolt the die jammed in the same locations (both nuts and 
die ran up fine until then). 
I have no explanation, that's just what happened to us (can only surmise the 
TPI were slightly different). My dad wants to just double-nut the U-bolts--when 
he's not looking I'll replace them. 
bs 
-------------------------------- 
Bob Spidell - San Jose, CA 
Bob, 
Absolutely, positively, no doubt in my mind! UNF = SAE Fine and UNC = SAE 
Coarse. It was set up this way when the British transitioned away from the 
Whitworth Standard. Now, 
. 
. 
. 
And there's more, but I won't go into them since they'll really obscure the 
issue, but just remember, to be Whitworth they MUST have a 55 degree thread 
angle. 
Cheers, 
Curt 
On Mon, Nov 30, 2009 at 9:01 AM, Bob Spidell < bspidell@comcast.net > wrote: 
re: "*Unified Fine (UNF)* - Identical to American SAE Fine and 
*Interchangeable*. The angle of the threads is 60 degrees." 
Are you sure about this one? For instance, the threads on the large U-bolt that 
fastens the axle to rear springs is noted as 'UNF' in, for instance, the Moss 
catalog. I believe they are either 5/16" or 3/8." Anyway, we tried to run SAE 
fine nuts on them--they'll go about 3/4" inch just fine, then jam. A thread 
chaser will go 3/4", then cut, then go 3/4", then cut, etc. 
Same story with some of the nuts and bolts on the shock hardware. 
bs 
-------------------------------- 
Bob Spidell - San Jose, CA 
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