UNC 3/8 inch thread

UNC 3/8 inch thread

Anonymous
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Message 1 of 10

UNC 3/8 inch thread

Anonymous
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Dear Autodesk community

 

Im trying to model a part to be used in a tripod. For that a need a 3/8 inch UNC thread. The problem is that I can't find this type of thread in the selection of the standard thread-tool. Attached you see the choices given to me. Maybe the thread norm I need has a different name and is already available to me or do I need a different version of Autodesk?

 

Any help is appreciated.

 

Best regards

 

Dave

Accepted solutions (1)
25,264 Views
9 Replies
Replies (9)
Message 2 of 10

Anonymous
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Accepted solution

Hi,

 

UNC are under the ANSI Unified thread types. I think for tripods its the 16 theads per inch type.

 

Hope that helps!

 

Niels

 

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Message 3 of 10

Anonymous
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Thanks alot, I didn't know that. That solved my problem

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Message 4 of 10

Anonymous
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Hi,

 

That will help me too. However I got class 1B,2B and 3B. Which is the one I need?

 

Thanks

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Message 5 of 10

Anonymous
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Googled it, thanks!

 

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Message 6 of 10

greg3SZDC
Community Visitor
Community Visitor

I'm unable to find this option in my menu.  Can you please let me know if there's another library that needs to be loaded?  Thanks.

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Message 7 of 10

thekondrat
Enthusiast
Enthusiast

How do i make a thread for the bicycle pedals? I do not find such in the list - 9 / 16-20?

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Message 8 of 10

Anonymous
Not applicable

Not sure if you still need the bicycle pedal thread size  but 

 

It should be ANSI Unified Screw Thread - Size 0.5625

The designation you want, which is 20 UN.

Hope it helps. 

As for the classes, here are information to help you choose. In my case, I would just go with trial and error. (If you are using 3d printer, print only the thread to see which class fit is good for you to save time and filament)

https://www.fastenal.com/content/feds/pdf/Article%20-%20Screw%20Threads%20Design.pdf

 

Message 9 of 10

Anonymous
Not applicable

If there's ever a thread you need that you can't find in fusion 360, inserting something with the mating thread from McMaster and cutting the profile with it is a good option. 

Message 10 of 10

Spit40
Explorer
Explorer

I had to google as well to find out what class 1b, 2b and 3b are. To save others time I found that it's to do with tolerances. 3B is the tightest fit and 1B is the loosest.