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fraction to thousandth a question

koditten

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Having a but of trouble doing basic math here. Remember doing these conversions in school . IM much dumber now.

5/64 calculated to what when listed as thousandth a of an inch?

A math refresher course would be appreciated as well.

As usual, thanks in advance.

KO
 
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kazlx

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Uh, just divide 5 by 64.

0.078 rounded to thousandths. If you want something easy there are millions of charts online. Usually for drill bits.

fract-mm-in-dec.gif
 
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Tronyadorable

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Take this to a print shop, get it on gloss and laminated
I've got them for drills-taps--sheet metal ga. to fractions, metric and thousandths etc.
Google images *** chart. Pick the larger sizes, save to the thumb drive and heat to the print shop.

Bookmark this site too.
It's the homepage on my shop computer
http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/



InchAndMetricConversions.gif
 
OP
K

koditten

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Alright! I was doing it right the first time.

A little back ground. This number was given to me in reference to mig welding wire and was told this would work for automotive sheet steel. When I did the math I thought there is no way that large of wire would be used for automotive work.

5/64 is more than 2x the size of my regular .035. In fact I have no idea what that size of wire would be used for.

Thanks for confirmation

KO
 

creativecars

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Math 101

A fraction can always be converted to a decimal by taking the top number (numerator) and dividing by the bottom number (denominator).
IE..
3/8 is 3 divided by 8= .375

To change a decimal to a fraction.
Read .375 as three hundred seventy five thousandths and write it as 375/1000and reduce the fraction to its lowest terms = 3/8
 

creativecars

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Alright! I was doing it right the first time.

A little back ground. This number was given to me in reference to mig welding wire and was told this would work for automotive sheet steel. When I did the math I thought there is no way that large of wire would be used for automotive work.

5/64 is more than 2x the size of my regular .035. In fact I have no idea what that size of wire would be used for.

Thanks for confirmation

KO

5/64 is big wire... I worked in trailer mfg. where we build 20 to 120+ton trailers, some of the frames were welded with that stuff.
 
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gahrajmahal

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Thanks for all the resources folks. I teach blueprint reading and the chart that Tronyadorable is the one I have been searching for. When you have a non-native person who is used to metric, fractions really throw them off. On that chart I show them the relationship that 1 mm = .03937 and 1 in = 25.400, both the conversion factors you use to multiply with. So if you have inch measurement and want to convert it to mm, multiply by 25.4. If you have mm and want to convert to inches multiply by .03937.
I'm gonna have to get me some of those free charts!
 
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creativecars

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Thanks for all the recourses folks. I teach blueprint reading and the chart that Tronyadorable is the one I have been searching for. When you have a non-native person who is used to metric, fractions really throw them off. On that chart I show them the relationship that 1 mm = .03937 and 1 in = 25.400, both the conversion factors you use to multiply with. So if you have inch measurement and want to convert it to mm, multiply by 25.4. If you have mm and want to convert to inches multiply by .03937.
I'm gonna have to get me some of those free charts!

When teaching blueprints I understand you must convert exact measurement, but I really hate teaching conversion... I think it is less confusing to teach a system and use one or the other. Then a person can gain usable information.
 

joe_padavano

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The computer or phone that you're typing this on has a calculator function built in. That's a LOT faster than surfing to some website to find a pre-printed conversion list. As noted way back at the top of this thread, simply divide the upper number by the lower one.
 

kazlx

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I can look at my chart on the wall faster than I can get my phone out and use it. It's just handy to have in the shop.
 
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