British Standard Whitworth


British Standard Whitworth is an imperial-unit-based screw thread standard.

History

The Whitworth thread was the world's first national screw thread standard, devised and specified by Joseph Whitworth in 1841. Until then, the only standardization was what little had been done by individual people and companies, with some companies' in-house standards spreading a bit within their industries. Whitworth's new standard specified a 55° thread angle and a thread depth of 0.640327p and a radius of 0.137329p, where p is the pitch. The thread pitch increases with diameter in steps specified on a chart.
The Whitworth thread system was later to be adopted as a British Standard to become British Standard Whitworth. An example of the use of the Whitworth thread are the Royal Navy's Crimean War gunboats. These are the first instance of mass-production techniques being applied to marine engineering, as the following quotation from the obituary from The Times of 24 January 1887 for Sir Joseph Whitworth shows:
An original example of the gunboat type engine was raised from the wreck of the SS Xantho by the Western Australian Museum. On disassembly, all its threads were shown to be of the Whitworth type.
With the adoption of BSW by British railway lines, many of which had previously used their own standard both for threads and for bolt head and nut profiles, and improving manufacturing techniques, it came to dominate British manufacturing.
In the US, BSW was replaced when steel bolts replaced iron, but was still being used for some aluminium parts as late as the 1960s and 1970s when metric-based standards replaced the Imperial ones.
American Unified Coarse was originally based on almost the same Imperial fractions. The Unified thread angle is 60° and has flattened crests. From in up to in, thread pitch is the same in both systems except that the thread pitch for the in bolt is 12 threads per inch in BSW versus 13 tpi in the UNC.

Thread form

The form of a Whitworth thread is based on a fundamental triangle with an angle of 55° at each peak and valley. The sides are at a flank angle of Θ = 27.5° perpendicular to the axis. Thus, if the thread pitch is p, the height of the fundamental triangle is H = p/ = 0.96049106p. However, the top and bottom of each of these triangles is cut off, so the actual depth of thread is of that value, or h = p/ = 0.64032738p. The peaks are further reduced by rounding them with a 2× = 180° − 55° = 125° circular arc. This arc has a height of e = HsinΘ/6 = 0.073917569p and a radius of r = e/ = 0.13732908p.

Spanner size

To simplify matters, the term hexagon is used in this section to denote either bolt head or nut.
Whitworth and BSF spanner markings refer to the bolt diameter, rather than the distance across the flats of the hexagon as in other standards. Confusion can arise because each Whitworth hexagon was originally one size larger than that of the corresponding BSF fastener. This leads to instances where for example, a spanner marked BSF is the same size as one marked W. In both cases the spanner jaw width of 0.710 in, the width across the hexagon flat, is the same.
Certain branches of industry used Whitworth fasteners with a smaller hexagon under the designation "AutoWhit" or Auto-Whit and this series was formalised by the British Engineering Standards Association in 1929 as standard No. 193, with the 'original' series being No. 190 and the BSF series No. 191.
During World War II the smaller size hexagon was adopted more widely to save metal and this usage persisted thereafter. Thus it is today common to encounter a Whitworth hexagon which does not fit the nominally correct spanner and following the previous example, a more modern spanner may be marked BS to indicate that they have a jaw size of 0.710 in and designed to take either the BSW or BSF hexagon.
Whitworth fasteners with the larger hexagons to BS 190 are now often colloquially referred to as 'pre-war' size, even though that is not strictly correct.

Comparison with other standards

The British Standard Fine standard has the same thread angle as the BSW, but has a finer thread pitch and smaller thread depth. This is more like the modern "mechanical" screw and was used for fine machinery and for steel bolts.
The British Standard Cycle standard which replaced the Cycle Engineers' Institute standard was used on British bicycles and motorcycles. It uses a thread angle of 60° compared to the Whitworth 55° and very fine thread pitches.
The British Association screw thread standard is sometimes classed with the Whitworth standard fasteners because it is often found in the same machinery as the Whitworth standard. However it is actually a metric based standard that uses a 47.5° thread angle and has its own set of head sizes. BA threads have diameters of 6 mm and smaller, and were and still are particularly used in precision machinery.
The Whitworth 55° angle remains commonly used today worldwide in form of the 15 British standard pipe threads defined in ISO 7, which are commonly used in water supply, cooling, pneumatics, and hydraulic systems. These threads are designated by a number between 1/16 and 6 that originates from the nominal internal diameter in inches of a steel pipe for which these threads were designed. These pipe thread designations do not refer to any thread diameter.
Other threads that used the Whitworth 55° angle include Brass Threads, British Standard Conduit, Model Engineers, and British Standard Copper.

Current usage

The standard tripod mount on all SLR cameras and, where fitted, on compact cameras, and therefore on all tripods and monopods, is 1/4 Inch Whitworth. Larger format cameras use 5/16 inch Whitworth with tripod adaptors from 1/4 inch Whitworth if necessary.
The widely used British Standard Pipe thread, as defined by the ISO 228 standard, uses Whitworth standard thread form. Even in the United States, personal computer liquid cooling components use the G thread from this series.
The Leica Thread-Mount used on rangefinder cameras and on many enlarging lenses is in by 26 turns-per-inch Whitworth, an artifact of this having been developed by a German company specializing in microscopes and thus equipped with tooling capable of handling threads in inches and in Whitworth.
The in Whitworth threads have been the standard Meccano thread for many years and it is still the thread in use by the French Meccano Company.
Stage lighting suspension bolts are most commonly in and in BSW. Companies that initially converted to metric threads have converted back, after complaints that the finer metric threads increased the time and difficulty of setup, which often takes place at the top of a ladder or scaffold.
Fixings for garden gates traditionally used Whitworth carriage bolts, and these are still the standard supplied in UK and Australia.

Historical misuse

British Morris and MG engines from 1923 to 1955 were built using metric threads but with bolt heads and nuts dimensioned for Whitworth spanners and sockets. In 1919 Morris Motors took over the French Hotchkiss engine works which had moved to Coventry during the First World War. The Hotchkiss machine tools were of metric thread but metric spanners were not readily available in Britain at the time, so fasteners were made with metric thread but Whitworth heads.

In popular culture

In the 2011 movie Cars 2 by Disney / Pixar, the vital clue to the discovery of the villain, Sir Miles Axlerod, is that he uses Whitworth bolts. Although Axlerod does not precisely resemble any real car, he seems most closely to match the original Range Rover Classic. In reality, early model Range Rovers used parts with imperial dimensions, although the photograph of the villain's engine is virtually identical to the later 3.5 litre single plenum Rover V8.