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I'm modelling a custom nozzle to screw onto my silicone caulking tube [long story - I need hundreds of specific-shaped blobs squeezed out over (to waterproof) old roof-bolts]... and ran into this head-scratcher:-
My nozzle needs an internal female thread to affix to the tube:-
I can measure all those bits with my digital callipers, and in the past when I made a Voss-to-Sodastram adapter, I manually recreated everything from first-principals... which worked great... but took a days to get right!
What is the real way that pro's do this? How do I know which of all those things to use, and how to determine the parameters "Thread Type", "Size", "Designation", "Class" and if I need to click the "Modelled" box?
I'm guessing...
a) that almost all those Thread-Type options are obscure things I can ignore (And, LOL, "ACME"? Did Wile E. Coyote give them some kind of trademark concession?)
b) I can probably measure the distance of some things to work out one or more of those other parameters
Also - what's the story about tolerances? I always engineer in a small "gap" (parametric value) when making stuff to join with other stuff, which I find makes everything fit easily, and can be tweaked if I want it more or less snug. How do we pick (internal female) threads such that it's actually going to fit properly (onto the male tube nipple thread - and for interests sake - if I wanted to 3D print the male thread too - what's the "pro" way to specify that gap)?
In the case of a nozzle thread like this though - I expect I really need something more like a pipe thread? One which has a slight taper to it, so it connects easily, but fits tighter the harder you screw it down?
Solved! Go to Solution.