As far as taps and dies go, the British Empire is generally metric nowadays.I use metric and imperial.
Much the same -- I call them "metric" and "inch ****". I have one drawer way in the back for inch **** in case farm machinery shows up, but since I don't work on vintage cars or heavy trucks, and rarely work on Harleys or lawn machinery, it's just not part of my world. YMMV, of course.I just call them Metric and useless.
Because it was the standard that most countries used before adopting the metric system.How is anything only used by 3 countries (USA, Liberia and Burma) “standard”? That is the most arrogant thing ever.
Although… as they say… there are two kinds of countries… those that have been to the moon… and those that use metric…
Maybe this is justified arrogance.
Much the same -- I call them "metric" and "inch ****". I have one drawer way in the back for inch **** in case farm machinery shows up, but since I don't work on vintage cars or heavy trucks, and rarely work on Harleys or lawn machinery, it's just not part of my world. YMMV, of course.
"SAE" is widely used to mean "inch ****", but is very much incorrect, since many of the actual SAE standards for fasteners and suchlike include metric. The actual standards published by the Society of Automotive Engineers use the terms "metric" and "inch", since these are the clearest and most accurate words. (You can add the modifier "****" depending on your predilections.
It occurs to me that the term IMPERIAL might have been marketing code for tools that were as soft as butter.For example:
J2485_201212: Fastener Part Standard - Machine Screw Nuts (Metric and Inch) - SAE International
This SAE Part Standard covers selected machine screw nuts manufactured in accordance with American Society for Mechanical Engineers (ASME) dimensional standards. This document covers material most often used in ship systems and equipment but its use may be applied wherever nuts of the covered materwww.sae.org
All the above said, I have no idea where the term "imperial" came from or why anyone uses it, but it is another term some people use for some reason. "Inch" is more accurate, and saves two syllables and four letters besides, so I dunno why you'd ever use "imperial".
It occurs to me that the term IMPERIAL might have been marketing code for tools that were as soft as butter.
Imperial is simply the actual name of the system of measurement, just like metric being the name of its counterpart.
SAE is metric these days.Seems odd to use the term "inch tools" when you wouldn't say "millimeter tools".
For me it's imperial and metric. SAE is a standard, as is DIN or JIS. (And Whitworth.)
It would be interesting if any tool manufacturers from an English speaking country refers to their inch tools as SAE.I looked at Amazon just out of curiosity.
I don't know what important information can be gleamed from this - except perhaps that there is no universal term for manufacturers either as far as I can determine. Nobody said "imperial" that I saw.
- To my surprise, Tekton refers to these as "Inch" sockets. I said earlier I'd never heard them described this way - maybe I just wasn't paying attention.
- Proto includes "metric" for metric tools, but seems to just leave off any description for inch tools (e.g. "Stanley J52107 Proto 10-Piece 12 Point 3/8-Inch Drive Deep Socket Set").
- Neiko uses "SAE" in the description
- Sunex says "standard"
- Just like Proto, Williams says nothing (e.g. "Williams WSS-23RC 23-Piece 1/2-Inch Drive Shallow 12 Point Socket Set").
- Gearwrench says "SAE"
- SK and Grey used "fractional" sometimes.
Is imperial an informal standard or is it governed by somebody?
SAE is metric these days.
It would be interesting if any tool manufacturers from an English speaking country refers to their inch tools as SAE.
All the above said, I have no idea where the term "imperial" came from or why anyone uses it, but it is another term some people use for some reason. "Inch" is more accurate, and saves two syllables and four letters besides, so I dunno why you'd ever use "imperial".
Just cause one is not used to hearing imperial doesn't mean it is not commonly used. Imperial is what the measurement system was called used in the UK, Canada, etc before they switched to metric.perhaps that there is no universal term for manufacturers either as far as I can determine. Nobody said "imperial" that I saw.
Yes, and old US wrenches commonly were sized to the bolt diameter, not the head dimension. That changed sometime around the 30sThey're usually referred to as AF or A/F which stands for "across flats". (As opposed to whitworth where a wrench size refers to the bolt's nominal thread diameter, not the hex head diameter.)
I have a bunch of BSF and CEI hardware. Should I just toss them in with the inch sized nuts and bolts and label it IMPERIAL?So the name imperial may not be absolutely correct for the group of measurements but it's more appropiate than SAE, fractional, inch, DIN, JIS, ISO, etc. Call it what you will. I still call it imperial & metric to describe the groups of measurements. That's what I'm used to like others are used to calling it what they are used to.
It's a proper governed and defined standard, just like the metric system.
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Imperial units - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
It's still a standard and not a system of measurement.
That's why none of the names in this thread to call what what matters to me except metric. It works out fine for metric. It depends on what. I'll say Imperial to call the group of measurements just as I used to say Standard & sometimes still do/have to depending on who I'm around in person. Calling the US system depending on the type of group by their appropiate terms like USCS, UTS, will confuse most people, & just don't sound right.I have a bunch of BSF and CEI hardware. Should I just toss them in with the inch sized nuts and bolts and label it IMPERIAL?
Seems like there's an even more distinct difference considering thread sizes (which is relevant to this thread) than there is with liquid measures (which is not relevant to this thread).
I knew there were some old farts around this forum, but I think you might win the prize.Imperial should not be used in the US. We had to kill so many people to not be part of an empire.
A good king is a dead king.
Cleaned out box this weekend and came across my whitworth sockets and wrenches I used to use on my old Norton motorcycles. Bikes gone but memories remain!I looked that up, but I don't have anything yet in that standard.
Although I did discover I had a fair amount of NPT/NPS taps and a few dies...