What is 'AF'?
Author
Discussion

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

89,376 posts

281 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
I was looking for brass hex bar and 'AF' came up a lot.

I chose 4mm AF (8BA/5/32"). I know BA, but what does AF stand for?

Richard-D

1,507 posts

80 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Across Flats. It's a straight measurement between the two faces. Usually used with imperial sizes but correct with metric too.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

89,376 posts

281 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Perfect, thanks!

It looks like a kind of thread, like 'something Fine', but hex bar isn't threaded.

Mercdriver

3,000 posts

49 months

Friday 20th December 2024
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Buy a set of Zeus charts, that will explain all- and a lot more!

Baldchap

9,181 posts

108 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
It's 1972.

Like imperial measurements, unless you need it you don't need it and it absolutely should not be encouraged.

littleredrooster

5,982 posts

212 months

Friday 20th December 2024
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It can either mean Across the Flats (hex bar, nuts etc.), or American Fine (screw thread) depending on the context.

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

89,376 posts

281 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
It's 1972.

Like imperial measurements, unless you need it you don't need it and it absolutely should not be encouraged.
In this case the size was crucial as it's for a scale model boat.

After a moment's thought I figured out that '1972' is not the year AF was invented but 0.1972". However that's 5mm not 4mm...


Mercdriver

3,000 posts

49 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
It's 1972.

Like imperial measurements, unless you need it you don't need it and it absolutely should not be encouraged.
Rubbish!

Baldchap

9,181 posts

108 months

Friday 20th December 2024
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I'll double down and say Whitworth too!

Metric is, thankfully, here to stay! laugh

OutInTheShed

11,734 posts

42 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
littleredrooster said:
It can either mean Across the Flats (hex bar, nuts etc.), or American Fine (screw thread) depending on the context.
Never heard of 'American fine'.
AF spanners are marked with the jaw size.
Whitworth spanners are marked with the bolt rod diameter.

'American' threads would be UNC and UNF, unified national coarse or fine.
Before the SAE unified standard threads, various companies used various threads.

I suppose it's always worth considering other people may have crackpot (to you!) understandings of obvious abbreviations.
I've had to ask UK engineers not to use 'mil' as short for 'mm', because in the US&A, a 'mil' is what my Dad used to call a 'thou'.
When it's not an angle, that is!

Simpo Two

Original Poster:

89,376 posts

281 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
I'll double down and say Whitworth too!

Metric is, thankfully, here to stay! laugh
Just 'cos you couldn't do fractions at skool wink

We were much more successful as a nation when we used our own measurements. Then we adopted Napoleon's measurements and went the same way he did...!

The Three D Mucketeer

6,644 posts

243 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Baldchap said:
I'll double down and say Whitworth too!

Metric is, thankfully, here to stay! laugh
You should tell American aircraft manufacturers that smile

Sheepshanks

37,595 posts

135 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
I've had to ask UK engineers not to use 'mil' as short for 'mm', because in the US&A, a 'mil' is what my Dad used to call a 'thou'.
With 40x difference, that could lead to some head scratching depending on where the design was built!

Mercdriver

3,000 posts

49 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
The large orbiting mirror had the wrong curvature because the yanks took the metric measurements as imperial.

1960/1970 American cars have ANF and ANC threads so if you are restoring a car from that generation Zeus charts will help you find the proper thread.

BrokenSkunk

4,894 posts

266 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
OutInTheShed said:
I've had to ask UK engineers not to use 'mil' as short for 'mm', because in the US&A, a 'mil' is what my Dad used to call a 'thou'.
For the same reason I spent a coule of decades asking the Americans to use "thou" instead of "mil", 'cus it confused the UK team.

popegregory

1,803 posts

150 months

Friday 20th December 2024
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As an aside to the previous helpful answers, don’t use it in conversation with a young person…

Mercdriver

3,000 posts

49 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
No point in discussing the different threads used by bicycle manufactures then, they used another system altogether banghead

ARHarh

4,849 posts

123 months

Friday 20th December 2024
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Mercdriver said:
No point in discussing the different threads used by bicycle manufactures then, they used another system altogether banghead
It was all 26 tpi if I recall though so you only needed one thread gauge smile

Error_404_Username_not_found

3,652 posts

67 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
Imperial (or inch based) measurement and thread standards seem to have survived quite well, even outside USA, in hydraulic/pneumatic applications.
BSPP, BSPT, NPT, JIC, and so forth. Even then the American style fittings stick to established SAE thread forms. JIC connectors use UNF threads IIRC. And even Swagelok which is relatively modern is inch-based.
This got some of my younger trainees a bit hot under the collar, not wanting to buy inch sized tools.
I'm aware there are metric hydraulic connections (Ermeto? and some weird Russian stuff), but I very seldom ever saw any.

See also: wheel and tyre sizes which blithely mix Inch and Metric!
I have also personally seen UNF threaded wheel studs and screws with metric hexes.

I still have the Whitworth/BSF spanners and sockets I bought around 60 years ago, and occasionally still get to use them.

littleredrooster

5,982 posts

212 months

Friday 20th December 2024
quotequote all
ARHarh said:
Mercdriver said:
No point in discussing the different threads used by bicycle manufactures then, they used another system altogether banghead
It was all 26 tpi if I recall though so you only needed one thread gauge smile
It was indeed. BSA, AJS/Matchless, Triumph, Norton et al used to scatter Cycle Thread stuff around the bikes, alongside the usual BSF/BSW stuff.