7/16" hex nut diameter = 11/16" wrench size
7/16" hex bolt diameter = 5/8" wrench size
7/16" square nut diameter = 3/4" wrench size
7/16" square bolt diameter = 5/8" wrench size
That's according to Fastenal, where there are other instances of sizes not corresponding, either between nuts and bolts or wrenches, but only some of them list different sizes like that, while the majority are the same, regardless of being hex or square. I'm not talking about heavy or otherwise different parts (which may be expected to vary in outer diameter), and they don't seem to change based on thread type, so these inconsistencies are between standard parts, in 7/16" diameter for example.
Not that square fasteners are as typical, but they usually correspond to hex sizes all around, on paper (so to speak). I was wondering because some wrench sizes, like 5/8", 13/16", and 1" were only listed for square nuts. Or at least I know there's a hex pipe coupler that a 5/8" wrench fits too.
7/16" hex bolt diameter = 5/8" wrench size
7/16" square nut diameter = 3/4" wrench size
7/16" square bolt diameter = 5/8" wrench size
That's according to Fastenal, where there are other instances of sizes not corresponding, either between nuts and bolts or wrenches, but only some of them list different sizes like that, while the majority are the same, regardless of being hex or square. I'm not talking about heavy or otherwise different parts (which may be expected to vary in outer diameter), and they don't seem to change based on thread type, so these inconsistencies are between standard parts, in 7/16" diameter for example.
Not that square fasteners are as typical, but they usually correspond to hex sizes all around, on paper (so to speak). I was wondering because some wrench sizes, like 5/8", 13/16", and 1" were only listed for square nuts. Or at least I know there's a hex pipe coupler that a 5/8" wrench fits too.
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Well, saying that a low profile wrench fits a low profile fastener would make more sense all around. Describing those as "higher profile nuts" would be better than "taller profile" I'd say, because it refers to depth, not height. As with the thread protrusion of a bolt, it involves the depth that a nut is threaded onto it, and a lower profile nut would allow for higher (or increased) depth when threading it on, where a "deep" socket may be required to access it (or they should call that a tall socket, and it's low profile counterpart a short socket, but they don't). Deep sockets refer to a "high profile" then, and low profile sockets refer to "shallowness", NOT shortness. The same goes for "thin" wrenches, except they should just be called low profile, or shallow also. The rest are standard profile, or standard depth.
It's no wonder they call people nut jobs for losing their minds. I was just thinking of the hardware in terms of wrenches, not sockets, to make sense of its misnomers (but then I was comparing more than one misnomer, including the tools). Not to say that "high nut" is a misnomer in itself, but them saying that high means it has a taller profile defines it as one (unlike simply saying it has a higher profile, or elaborating that such a profile refers to depth in terms of fastening).