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What uses 19/32?

unslow1

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I have been going through my Grandfather's stuff. I also bought some old auction tools. There are several wrenches and sockets that are 19/32. I have no idea what they would fit.
 
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CNGsaves

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That one fit the . . . . friggen##&??@##%##&!! . . . . bolt grandpa was so pissed when the cresent wrench wouldn't loosen it up . . . . that he went out and bought a wrench so that would never happen again!!
 

neophyte

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WWIIjeep

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If you ever work on older machinery or vehicles you'll use it. I use 19/32" and 25/32" wrenches and sockets on such things quite often.

19/32" was the standard wrench size for 5/16" USS heavy hex nuts through the 1950s. Modern 5/16" heavy hex nuts are 9/16" instead. One of the common places you'll find the older type is on 1950s and older Rockwell/Delta machine tools.
 

egnorant

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I have all kinds of x/32 sockets that don't fit on my socket rails or in kits.
Seems as if 9/32 is the largest in modern stuff.
I have found 11, 13, 15, 19, 21, 23 and 25/32 sockets and am willing to bet that I have a 17/32 somewhere.

One of the 15/32 is stamped FAMILY and USA. Anyone ever heard of this brand?

Bruce
 

NHBandit

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11/32 you will find fairly often on the small nut on older GM starters. It's the largest /32 size I've ever run into and I've been wrenching on cars for a long time. I have a bunch of older wrenches & sockets in those odd sizes as well but have only ever used them on rounded nuts & things like that. Also sometimes on British motorcycles before I finally broke down & bought real Whitworth tools.
 
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lbgradwell

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Looking over my stuff, I see I have:

5/32"
13/64"
7/32"
15/64"
9/32"
11/32"
15/32"
17/32"
19/32”
21/32"
25/32"


I wonder if there was ever a 13/32" and/or a 23/32"..?
 

bonneyman

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Americas best shot at a 15mm?

:thumbup: When I thought I'd never find a Bonney 15mm deep 12 point socket, I grabbed three 19/32" Bonney's, as the Loc-Rite broaching would accommodate the slightly smaller diameter.
Then I found two 15mm deeps. But I'm keeping the 19/32's around just in case.
 
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er3456df

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I have a nutdriver in 11/32 for that one time I replaced a bazillion fluorescent lamp ballasts in an office building.

Can't think of any others.
 

GRX

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Agree on them possibly being for older machinery. I still have some of my grandfather's Herbrand sockets in 64th sizes which pre-date World War One when many things such as thread and hex sizes were standardized.
 

hermetic

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I seem to remember diesel injector pipe nuts of that size that I kept a couple of spanners for, may have been on series 2 land-rover, or Perkins, its a long time ago............
Phil, UK
 

OccupantRJ

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It can be used to turn a 1/2" square head jackbolt on conveyor takeups. Also older Ford suspension fasteners. Some Craftsman sets in the early 70's contained this socket.
 

WWIIjeep

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11/32" is still the normal size for 8-32 hex nuts. It's still included in nut driver sets and 1/4" drive socket sets. 9/32" and 7/32" are generally included as well, although they aren't as commonly used.

31/32" works on some engine oil pressure sending units in lieu of the special sockets made for same.
 

wafrederick

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19/32 is equivelant to a 15mm.I tried it once with a 10mm nut requiring a 15mm wrench or socket.It fit the nut with no problems.15/32 is equivelant to a 12mm.
 

lbgradwell

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Yes, all the 32nds of an inch up to 1-9/32" but you have to go back quite a few years to find them listed in catalogs or included in sets.


Well, I took a look and it seems 13/32" & 31/32" were relatively easy to find, but I had to go back to the 1927 J.H. Williams catalogue to find:

23/32"
29/32"
1-7/64"
1-19/64"

and these 4 sizes are Structural Wrenches.

The same catalogue yielded a 27/32" in what they called a General Service Pattern (a double open-end S-wrench)...
 

Lassen Forge

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It's a misdemeanor, they missed out on the original thread so reviving it keeps them from being meaner...

Thinking about it - a lot of stuff used to be in 32nsds and 64ths, not just sockets but drills, etc - still is, when you're cutting threads, etc.

Had a rack of sockets that included all the old 32nds and most of the 64ths, Used them mainly for antique stuff and yeah, metrics and whitworth before I had actual tools in these sizes. (and think, whitworth predated SAE and USS...)
 
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ecotec

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When I find a /32 or /64 socket or wrench, I put it in a drawer with Whitworth, BS, BA, and AF.

Unless my socket tray actually has a spot for it, that’s where it goes.
 
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