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When Read That A Bolt Is A

When shopping for a bolt this is what the label read:M6 X 1.0 X 40 Metric Hex Bolt what do the dimensions mean

diameter and thread size on it that's all it means ,if your matching one up always try to get one about the same length as you had,good luck.

How to read this bolt spec? 3/18-16 UNC 2B (21)?

More engineering than maths, but see if I can help
If this is something you want to understand properly read through this full explanation.
http://www.ring-plug-thread-gages.com/ti...
This is a summary, based on what I found on GOOGLE. (You could do that next time).

In the United States, the SPOKEN convention for describing threads is to give the number of threads per inch, preceded by a gauge number if the bolt is smaller than a quarter-inch in diameter, otherwise by the diameter in fractions of an inch. So, for example, in the United States the one might ask for a
“2-inch quarter-twenty bolt,” which would be
•2 inches long,
•have a nominal diameter of a quarter of an inch, and
•have twenty threads to the inch

Bolt specification: 3/18-16 UNC 2B (21) is a WRITTEN spec.
of an engineering standard inch-based fastener as explained below:

3/18-16UNC bolt refers to an American Standard (unified course thread) bolt
of diameter 3/8 inch width with 16 threads per inch

An engineer must be much more precise than a DIY guy.
The “2B” is a tolerance class which tells you about closeness of fit.
Higher tolerances are more expensive. see here for external/internal specs.
http://www.sizes.com/tools/bolts_inch_th...
The old guide used to be:
Loose-fit (class 1), Free-fit (class 2), Medium-Fit (class 3), and Close-fit (class 4).

The “21” is the gaging system number, as defined in ASME/ANSI B1.3M.
These are usually 21 or 22 or 23. See the picture at the beginning of this web page
http://www.threadcheck.com/technical-doc...

Additionally, the grade of bolt may be specified.
Now I know a lot more about bolts than I need to,
(but I hope it helped you)

Regards - Ian

What does "FC 9-6" mean on a bolt?

I am putting new plenum gaskets in my 2.8 V6 Fiero, and I have read the Fiero manual, and it tells me the bolts need to be torqued. However, the manual neglects to tell how much they need to be tightened.

The top of the bolts say: "FC 9-6" on them. They are 12-point, 10mm metric bolts. I have a torque wrench that can do 10 to 150 ft-lbs of torque. I just don't know what 9-6 means! Any help is appreciated, thank you!

-Tony

How do you read metric bolt charts?

It’s very simple.As a Mechanical Engineer, first of all you should know that there are two types of metric bolts available in market for general use.#1 Hex bolts#2 Allen boltsThe use of both depends on the application and the situation.Now the standard metric charts for the bolts is:Normally, the bolts with markings of 4.6 and 4.8 are used(in my experience), but I haven’t seen(personally) the use of bolt with marking of 8.8 of the top of it.Now the thread size and pitch as you can see is standardized by International System of Units - Wikipedia. It is accepted internationally to avoid complications in design and manufacturing of any product.The thread size is the nominal diameter of the bolt at the thread end.The pitch is the distance between two successive threads.The value of torque is the maximum possible force per meter length that you should apply while tightening the bolt.Images: GoogleThanksAkshay.

Whats the difference between an open bolt and closed bolt?

An open bolt gun fires with the bolt starting out in the locked open position. A closed bolt gun fires with the bolt starting in the closed position.

Closed Bolt: M16/M4, M2
Open Bolt: M249, M240B, Thompson Sub Machine Gun

What books should I read to understand the nuts and bolts of web development?

I would start with (proposed 1.1 standard):Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Message Syntax and Routing Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Conditional Requests Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Range Requests Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Caching Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Authentication They are a bit better organized and easier to read and understand than the "official" standard RFC:Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1That gives you the protocol layer.  From there it depends if you want to go deeper into "nuts and bolts"RFC 793 - Transmission Control Protocol RFC 791 - Internet Protocol and maybeRFC 1034 - Domain names - concepts and facilities

What is a stopper bolt? I've read it in a list of components of an electronic CVT.

It’s a bolt which limits the amount the primary pully in the transmission can squeeze the belt. Basically it prevents the belt from being able to pop off the pully.

Usain bolt will play football in real madrid?

I just read article usain bolt will join real madrid second team for playing football. I am sure he is good football player. everybody play football in jamaica. can he be successful in real madrid second team since he is world fastest man?

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