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![]() Michael Horowitz wrote: Faced with this difference in units of measurement, what approach do you take? - Mike --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You fall back on the 'accepted practices' rule. 'Gauge' as applied to SEAMLESS TUBING was usually defined as follows: 11ga = .125" wall thickness 13ga = .093" 16ga = .063" 18ga = .047" 20ga = .035" 22ga = .028" As applied to your situation, you would select tubing having a wall thickness of .047" for the repair. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- The table offered above does NOT agree with various gauge-vs-thickness charts in several particulars; some list 12ga as equal to .093 and 18ga is often shown as .050. Unfortunetely, many historic definitions of seamless tubing pre-date the availability of SAE 4130 and cite diameter & wall for MILD STEEL tubing that is no longer available, such as half-inch x .0375" wall (ie, '20 ga' according to a seamless tubing manufacturer of that era). -R.S.Hoover |
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Stealth Pilot wrote:
On Sun, 04 Jun 2006 22:52:50 GMT, cavelamb wrote: Michael Horowitz wrote: On 4 Jun 2006 14:13:29 -0700, wrote: Michael Horowitz wrote: Faced with this difference in units of measurement, what approach do you take? - Mike --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You fall back on the 'accepted practices' rule. 'Gauge' as applied to SEAMLESS TUBING was usually defined as follows: 11ga = .125" wall thickness 13ga = .093" 16ga = .063" 18ga = .047" 20ga = .035" 22ga = .028" As applied to your situation, you would select tubing having a wall thickness of .047" for the repair. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- The table offered above does NOT agree with various gauge-vs-thickness charts in several particulars; some list 12ga as equal to .093 and 18ga is often shown as .050. Unfortunetely, many historic definitions of seamless tubing pre-date the availability of SAE 4130 and cite diameter & wall for MILD STEEL tubing that is no longer available, such as half-inch x .0375" wall (ie, '20 ga' according to a seamless tubing manufacturer of that era). -R.S.Hoover ---------- Just what I needed - Thanks - Mike Just for the record, that's Thanks, VeeDubber... no it is thanks - mike mike was the guy saying thanks. perfectly plain to me. ....and no doubt veedubber and mike. if you do a search and replace to put a newline in place of the hyphen I'm sure the penny will drop for you as well. Stealth Pilot :-) Oh **** off. |
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![]() wrote: Michael Horowitz wrote: Faced with this difference in units of measurement, what approach do you take? - Mike --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You fall back on the 'accepted practices' rule. 'Gauge' as applied to SEAMLESS TUBING was usually defined as follows: 11ga = .125" wall thickness 13ga = .093" 16ga = .063" 18ga = .047" 20ga = .035" 22ga = .028" As applied to your situation, you would select tubing having a wall thickness of .047" for the repair. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- The table offered above does NOT agree with various gauge-vs-thickness charts in several particulars; some list 12ga as equal to .093 and 18ga is often shown as .050. Unfortunetely, many historic definitions of seamless tubing pre-date the availability of SAE 4130 and cite diameter & wall for MILD STEEL tubing that is no longer available, such as half-inch x .0375" wall (ie, '20 ga' according to a seamless tubing manufacturer of that era). -R.S.Hoover There are a number of different gauge systems and they have differing ideas as to thickness vs. gauge number. Six of them he http://www.constructionwork.com/reso...17bc2a4aac71b0 Aluminum gauges: http://www.engineersedge.com/gauge.htm Dan |
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