ibedayank
Well-known member
work on older British motorcycles
whitworth and sae No metric needed
whitworth and sae No metric needed
I have friends working in europe on aircraft and they have no issues getting sae. Stahlwille and gedore have aviation sets that are almost all sae with very few metric
Yes. Airbus will have a few metric fasteners but the standard for aviation has been set. Aviation requires standardization especially in commercial aircraft. Many carriers use contract operations to handle major inspections, these shops handle airbus, boeing, embraer etc... and are located around the world. Speed and efficiency is the name of the game. Lots and lots of money has been dumped into the testing and approval of aircraft fasteners, connectors, lines, hoses, and fittings. There is no such thing as a simple change.
Sure, but...
The world is also using metric (ISO) as standard. SAE only appears in North America. Think about the poor ******* who have to fix your SAE plane in Europe.
I use SAE tools to remove rounded or rusty metric fasteners before the extractors come out.
I have friends working in europe on aircraft and they have no issues getting sae. Stahlwille and gedore have aviation sets that are almost all sae with very few metric
Yes. Airbus will have a few metric fasteners but the standard for aviation has been set. Aviation requires standardization especially in commercial aircraft. Many carriers use contract operations to handle major inspections, these shops handle airbus, boeing, embraer etc... and are located around the world. Speed and efficiency is the name of the game. Lots and lots of money has been dumped into the testing and approval of aircraft fasteners, connectors, lines, hoses, and fittings. There is no such thing as a simple change.
The only exception I've run into is the nanchang cj-6. It's a chinese warbird trainer copied from a yak. It is all metric down to the rivets and sheet metal gauge. Complete pita trying to find replacement hardware that meets a standard I'm willing to put into an aircraft.
I'm sure there are manufacturers outside of the U.S. that is using metric, but there are no metric fasteners, that I'm aware of, that meet the federal code for use in aircraft certified anything but experimental. There are small cases where special certifications are given to certain parts or pieces but wide usage is not something that will happen anytime soon.
That may be, but this is kind of a silly place to come and talk about how to get by with the least amount of tools
Well, I gues if we (the USA) had lost World War 1 or World War 2, then this conversation would be mute, wouldn't it?
Going a little Off Topic here, but I feel I must......
While it was undisputedly of massive & indeed pivotal benefit that the U.S. were involved in both WW's & arguably, without U.S. involvement, the outcomes could have been much different.
I feel compelled to point out that the U.S. alone, did not win either war, there were many other nations involved, without whose involvement, the outcomes could have been similarly, very different.
One need only watch some of the coverage of the commemorations this past Friday, of the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings to see what & who was involved in that operation alone.
Going a little Off Topic here, but I feel I must......
While it was undisputedly of massive & indeed pivotal benefit that the U.S. were involved in both WW's & arguably, without U.S. involvement, the outcomes could have been much different.
I feel compelled to point out that the U.S. alone, did not win either war, there were many other nations involved, without whose involvement, the outcomes could have been similarly, very different.
One need only watch some of the coverage of the commemorations this past Friday, of the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings to see what & who was involved in that operation alone.
What about NASA and military rocketry?
Very interesting question. Anyone have an answer?
Very interesting question. Anyone have an answer?
People never remember the Russians.
Sure, but...
SAE only appears in North America.

When I was in school, nobody taught me about the Russians. That's probably true of all Americans. It wasn't until recently I've learned facts like this: on D-Day, there were 150 German divisions on the Eastern Front and 66 divisions on the Western Front. It wasn't even close. I'm disappointed in my teachers.
Link.
When I was in school, nobody taught me about the Russians. That's probably true of all Americans. It wasn't until recently I've learned facts like this: on D-Day, there were 150 German divisions on the Eastern Front and 66 divisions on the Western Front. It wasn't even close. I'm disappointed in my teachers.
Link.
Going a little Off Topic here, but I feel I must......
While it was undisputedly of massive & indeed pivotal benefit that the U.S. were involved in both WW's & arguably, without U.S. involvement, the outcomes could have been much different.
I feel compelled to point out that the U.S. alone, did not win either war, there were many other nations involved, without whose involvement, the outcomes could have been similarly, very different.
One need only watch some of the coverage of the commemorations this past Friday, of the 70th anniversary of the D-Day landings to see what & who was involved in that operation alone.
What about NASA and military rocketry?
Very interesting question. Anyone have an answer?
NASA works in imperial.
Military rockets still use AN, MS and NAS hardware and materials.
I have friends working in europe on aircraft and they have no issues getting sae. Stahlwille and gedore have aviation sets that are almost all sae with very few metric
Yes. Airbus will have a few metric fasteners but the standard for aviation has been set. Aviation requires standardization especially in commercial aircraft. Many carriers use contract operations to handle major inspections, these shops handle airbus, boeing, embraer etc... and are located around the world. Speed and efficiency is the name of the game. Lots and lots of money has been dumped into the testing and approval of aircraft fasteners, connectors, lines, hoses, and fittings. There is no such thing as a simple change.
The only exception I've run into is the nanchang cj-6. It's a chinese warbird trainer copied from a yak. It is all metric down to the rivets and sheet metal gauge. Complete pita trying to find replacement hardware that meets a standard I'm willing to put into an aircraft.
I'm sure there are manufacturers outside of the U.S. that is using metric, but there are no metric fasteners, that I'm aware of, that meet the federal code for use in aircraft certified anything but experimental. There are small cases where special certifications are given to certain parts or pieces but wide usage is not something that will happen anytime soon.
People never remember the Russians.
I think this topic comes up once a month. Same response as the other times.

Do new mechanics even bother with SAE/standard/inch tools anymore?
All modern automobiles are metric. Most new lawn and garden equipment is metric (at least mine is). The only time I use standard tools is when I score an old piece of equipment at an estate sale.
If you were building a new tool kit would you even bother with SAE (until you actually needed it or were into older cars)?