Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations waross on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Special DIN 405 thread callout?

Status
Not open for further replies.

NinerEng

Mechanical
Jun 11, 2021
9
Hello,

I am working on specifying an external thread that I have measured on a part.
From what me and our experienced machinist have been able to conclude, it is a non-standard DIN 405 thread with a full root radius and truncated outside diameter.
That being said, I am having trouble finding the appropriate method to call this thread out on our print.

Measurements
Measured thread OD: 18.542mm
Measured thread pitch: 2.54mm
Measured thread ID at bottom of root: 16.002
Measured length of thread: 5.97mm

Proposed call-out:
RD 18.452 x 1/10" ↓ 5.97 DIN 405 SPL
PD 17.27

Note: This drawing is in inch sheet format for all other dimensions

Any feedback on this would be a huge help. Thanks
 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Tmoose, they're actually 30deg per the DIN standard. Also the thread root has a much larger radius than most standard threads.

If it wasn't truncated the thread shape would essentially be a wave because the radius of the crest = the radius of the root.

I'm pretty confident in the identification of the thread but the proper way to call it out is where I am struggling because it's essentially some oddball German standard
 
That callout probably won't define the tolerance on the values.

I'd would ignore the thread spec and just define it on the drawing completely using the thread specification as a guide. The special threads I've seen have used a standardized thread form and pitch and just changed one factor - this looks like hardly anything is unchanged except the angle. For certain there isn't a thread gauge that's any better.

DIN 405 threads aren't truncated, so you need to specify that separately, hence just make a drawing standalone and skip the DIN 405 reference.

The included angle is 60 degrees, it's just DIN 405 uses the flank angle which is half of that. Pesky Germans.


Edit: different sources say either "1/10" or that the pitch is threads per inch. Anyway - skip that trouble and fully define.
 
3DDave,
Thanks for the info. When you mention just calling it out without using the DIN 405 reference, how would that look from a syntax standpoint using the values that I have above?
I don't have access to the standard which calls out the formatting for these threads.
 
You still need to establish tolerances, which you won't get from the standard. The standard also doesn't handle truncation - which you say you have. You would not "call it out" at all, no syntax, no formatting - you would draw it just like the many other thread standards do with a profile view and dimensions - plenty of examples on websites.
 
DIN_CALLOUT_SNIP_hsgiqv.png


I called it out as best as I could in the image here.. The flagged number 3 references a note that says to check the thread with a mating part so they don't need to measure the PD. Not sure if this is the best way but it's the best I could come up with.
 
Is the threaded part "used in coupling gears and brake rods in railway waggons, valves, slides, fittings and by the fire brigade." ?
 
Tmoose, it is a fitting application on a medical device. Used to quickly seal a connector with an O-ring into a cap without too much rotational movement needed.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor