I've messed up. Bought a custom (lovely) gearnob and ordered 3/8 instead of m10.
As this wasn't cheap wanted to check before I bugger it up. Any reason why I'd struggle drilling and tapping to m10?
It's Ali with loads of thickness on the gearnob, so the question is about thread sizes. I think it's fine. Just want reassurance/ obvious
hints and tips first.
(Measure twice before ordering isn't the hint I'm looking for)
How annoying!
I think you will struggle to put a half decent thread in the gear knob. The outer diameter of the existing threads is 9.5mm or thereabouts. The pitch
is 24 threads per inch so much finer than M10. Much of the existing thread will interfere with your M10 thread.
That said..... If you give it a go and use an epoxy to bond it on you will probably get away with it.
Alternatively make an extension.
Good luck
Drill it out to 12mm, press fit some solid 12mm bar in. The drill & tap M10 ?
quote:
Originally posted by monkeyarms
Drill it out to 12mm, press fit some solid 12mm bar in. The drill & tap M10 ?
Not very "lococost" is it
quote:
Originally posted by monkeyarms
Not very "lococost" is it
Cut an inch of the gearstick and re thread that.
helicoil or keensert. You just need the tap and the insert, the tool can be locosted at home.
Or be super cheap, drill out the existing thread to M10 outer, fill the void with metal filled epoxy, drill it back out to M10 tapping diam and hope
an epoxy thread is enough to handle your grip strength.
[Edited on 14/7/22 by coyoteboy]
Is it 3/8 UNC or UNF? Also how much internal thread is there? UNC is 16TPI, UNF is 24TPI
A retapped thread will be stronger than any suggestion of drilling out and forming an epoxy thread. If you're concerned, do both but don't
drill it out first!
You should have no trouble tapping M10x1.5 without redrilling the pilot hole.
quote:
Originally posted by indykid
Is it 3/8 UNC or UNF? Also how much internal thread is there? UNC is 16TPI, UNF is 24TPI
A retapped thread will be stronger than any suggestion of drilling out and forming an epoxy thread. If you're concerned, do both but don't drill it out first!
You should have no trouble tapping M10x1.5 without redrilling the pilot hole.
I'd try running the tap in before drilling...
Ugh kludge a dodgy thread through a bunch of other threads as preferable to a bonded thread as per high load concrete anchor bolts, are you guys
bananas?
This is a gear stick knob, it just needs to be screwed on and not move, no-one's swinging off it, it's not taking high loads. Kludging
threads through other threads just minimises the engaged thread area, maximises the chances of cross threading and stripping.
Meh, do as you wish.
quote:
Originally posted by coyoteboy
Ugh kludge a dodgy thread through a bunch of other threads as preferable to a bonded thread as per high load concrete anchor bolts, are you guys bananas?
This is a gear stick knob, it just needs to be screwed on and not move, no-one's swinging off it, it's not taking high loads. Kludging threads through other threads just minimises the engaged thread area, maximises the chances of cross threading and stripping.
Meh, do as you wish.
quote:
Originally posted by indykid
Concrete anchor epoxy relies on the surface roughness of the inside of the hole and a large bond area. That's also why the embedded length of studs are threaded or knurled - it's a cost on operation which implies it's necessary, otherwise, screwfix would be selling round shank studs. The specific tensile strength isn't massive, but the significant shear area and mechanical interlocking gives the joint its overall strength. It's not ideal for short smooth bores.
Also protecting the ability to remove the gearknob is pretty handy.