Re: metric bolts
Dan, on host 62.200.126.2
Monday, September 30, 2002, at 08:12:42
metric bolts posted by Howard on Sunday, August 25, 2002, at 14:12:07:
The numbers on top generally refer to the material grades, for instance, 8.8 means the bolt has a UTS of 800N/MM^2 with a yield strength of 80% of UTS 10.9 means UTS of 1000N/MM^2 with a yield strength of 90%. The 3 little dashes also indicate the same information but in imperial rather than metric format.
Standard spanner sizes are 6mm = 10mm, 8mm = 13mm, 10mm = 16mm.
Bolts generally speaking do not indicate the size they are on them, but you can usually tell if they are metric or imperial by the markings above.
hope this helps
> I've been working on Vespas and I dug around under 30 years of junk in my garage and come up with a big container of metric nuts and bolts. So far, I have found the ones I needed, but I'm confused by the marking on them. I can't find anything that has much to do with the size and thread of the bolt, and I'm not even sure that I'm reading the grade markings right. For example, I found bolts 6, 8, and 10 millimeter sizes, but nothing on the head mentions these numbers. What does all this stuff mean? > > 8 mm bolt, head takes a 12 mm wrench, marked 4 on the head > 10 mm bolt takes a 14 mm wrench marked 3 > 8 mm bolt takes 13 mm wrench marked Berner 8.8 > 10 mm bolt takes 17 mm wrench marked metric E1 > 10 mm bolt takes 15 mm wrench marked 9.80 > 6 mm bolt takes a 10 mm wrench, marked 7 > > Then there is stuff like an 8 mm that takes a 13 mm wrench, and has the word "metric" at the top, a picture of an anchor in the middle, and three little dashes at 3, 6, and 9 o'clock. I also found head markings of "10.9," "er 8.8," and "ORV 80." > > Unlike some Americans, I am very comfortable with the metric system and use it all the time, so there is a chance I will understand an explanation. > > I think it is possible that they came from Italy, Germany, and Japan. Some of the markings may be trade marks. Can anybody explain this mess to me? > Thanks, > How"RinkWorks; *the* place for information"ard
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