Fasteners: Machine Screws and Bolts
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- Опубліковано 27 чер 2024
- The world is held together by fasteners, from the tiniest screws in fine watches to the enormous bolts holding our infrastructure together. This video covers some of the many common types of Machine Screws and Bolts.
It Illustrates the differences between them, how to name them and gives some examples of how they are used. The video is intended for the novice and intermediate level.
For more info please contact me at www.inspectorbots.com
or info@inspectorbots.com - Навчання та стиль
I learned much. Don't worry. This is a good comment. Thank you for posting. This is why I love UA-cam, where actual professionals share their knowledge.
A great big thanks to people like yourself who use their personal time to try and help others. There's a ton of people like me who appreciate it. Ignore the trolls . Awesome work and thanks again.
“No Way”. Lol. Loves the comic relief blurbs. Thanks for explaining
Haha awesome dude.. If you hadn't thrown in all those funny addition it probably wouldn't have kept my attention. Great method
NOT only the video, also your hands shows how BIG is your experience.
Thank you for the video
this was very organized and helpful to me. I love your sense of humor....the subject can be very dry and a few laughs made this so fun! Thanks
Thank you for this video. It was very informative!💯🤗
Really good video especially showing examples of where you would use each one
great, a vid like this is actually sorely needed in these days of DIYing everything, nice job
Thanks for this video - Studying for a landscape architecture exam and this was very helpful!
Very informative. Simple, funny and clear!
how beautifully explained !! plus those funny interventions in between makes it so joyful to understand ! :) Good work
The call and response is killing me 💀Great information!
Very clear explanation and easy to follow. My professor will be quizzing me on this stuff next week and your video definitely helped.
Thanks. Love that you know how the rest of the world looks at this stuff and made some fun at yourself.
I came for the information, stayed for the cut shots. Thank you sir.
Very well done Video explaining the different kinds of screws and bolts.
Super informative video - thank you!
Thank you so much. I was looking for such video. New information for me. Subscribed.
Thanks for the video, I just got to the Fastener industry and all of your video is very informative.
Thank you! ... All the info I needed and some more.
great video. nice way of explaining things
You rock dude! I was entertained throughout the entire vid. Well done.
really detailed explaination, thank you very much!!!
6:17 To find the screw size, subtract 0.060" from the shank diameter and divide by 13. You can do this in reverse of course, by multiplying the screw number by 13 and adding 0.060" to find the shank diameter. Great video.
So, the 10, 8, and 6 in the video have a shank diameter of .190", ..164", and 138".
Good job I used to review befor going back to school at UTI quick review before class discussion. Thanks.
Excellent video for basics of Mechanical engineering...very useful for fresh engineers those are joined newly in industries.......Refresher for experienced engineers....
Great video! btw I do appreciate the effort for making it more interesting haha.
Great video! I really liked how you added the "are you kidding?" and "really?"
great video, very informative for someone with rudimentary knowledge about fasteners.
Hi. I´m from Brazil and I teach Technical English for brasilians technicians and engineers. Your vídeo has been useful in my classes. Please don´t stop doing this great job. Congrats.
Nice example, thanks
Great video! Can you do another video explaining this stuff using metric units?
This is the best I have seen. Thank you.
Thank you
So helpful! thanks!
Oh, man, amazing video. Really funny and educative. Thanks a lot.
useful overview, thanks.
Welp, I learnt how to measure the length of a flat head bolt from this video, so thanks!
Nice and informative video. Thanks....
awesome video
Funny & informative. Thanks!
Great video, informative and funny.
great video
very good video thx
this video is so great. thankyou for this because my hard report answer all because of this video. thankyou
Thank you!
Very informative :D
loll I liked this video, very informative. I have a job interview tomorow at a company that distributes fasteners
ty.. this give me lot of info
Here I am looking for information on a M4 10mm bolt to finally install the bracket on a TV so I can mount it on the TV Stand. Still looking for a big head bolt so the bracket can stay put and not slip. . . Very informative and funny. Thank you.
You’re hilarious man hahah. Thanks for the video this helped me out a lot get informational
Thanks for the bolt humour
3:55 ... Lag Bolts. Actually a misnomer, since these items are screws, not bolts.... You can not use a nut with these items, the tip is pointed and you have to screw them in to fasten them. So, by definition, they are screws, not bolts.
Yes, Carriage bolts, or Stove bolts, Same Thing, Different Names.
amazing humor
Thank you sir
hey, you did a great work.
yes
good video
Nice vid. Very informative. I only watched because of the metric sizes as I am buying some screws that ONLY come in metrics. Im lazy and could have converted the sizes but whatever. Glad I watched.
Thanks a lot :) .
Haha you so funny! Love the video; very informative
Thanks a lot! It was a great help. The intermissions with your alter ego were kind of weird haha, but I won't judge
Good video =) 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
thank you
superb
best video !
I just started learning to build things as a hobby. This video really helped. Anyone know of a good fastener book that covers much more in depth so I can use as reference?
nice video.
where would you need coarse and where fine threads? What are the + and - of each?
thanks!
Fine threads are less likely to come loose under vibration (as mentioned) and are stronger as there core will be relatively thicker and engagement area slightly larger. Coarse threads will do up quicker and are less likely to strip. I would say loosely coarse threads are better for applications where repeated untightenening and tightening occur and fine threads where they will be staying put.
Good video please make more really really good .................
Theks
thanks
i dig it
WOW! Really? No way! Get out of here!
Really?
+Štěpán M. are you kidding me? 2:38
the cringe is real with this video
This man saved my GPA, someone give him an award
Jayant Harilela b
What were you studying where this video helped you?
'Your faces are darlin'... faces of a know-it-all kid, wakin' up, hahaha... enjoyed the easy teachin' style
7:00 "The 10-24 designation refers to the fact that this is a size 10 screw". The size 10 number is gotten from the major diameter being 60 thousandths plus 13 thousandths for each number. 0.060 plus 0.130 equals 0.190. Likewise, 6-32 is 0.060 plus (0.013 x 6) equals 0.138. The hole you would drill to use a tap would be the major diameter minus the thread pitch. For 10-32 it would be 0.190 minus 0.031 (1/32 of an inch approx.) which equals 0.159 inch. Drill that hole in the metal, use a 10-32 tap carefully, and the threaded fastener will fit right in.
the "bolts" that you showed at the beginning are actually hex head cap screws. you can tell by the washer face under the head. a machine bolt will not have that washer face .
Unless if the machine bolt is a tap bolt
Hi! I
removed my motorcycle's handle bar. then I cleaned the bolts. I notice
the two bolts had a very thin (hairline) metal shaving. the length is
around 0.3 cm. very short.
(I did not over-tighten the bolt)
the thread is still good, tight and snug.
Just like to ask if this is normal, and if the metal shavings are just from the factory when they drilled.
What is the difference or what are used for : cone head cap bolt and flat head cap bolt (minute 7:07), and hex head bolt ?
Very educative, in a language that lame people like me can understand. Thank you!
good
Good job man boring topic but you made interesting
Your presentation is really good,but I think u missed out on the screws with no cap the ones having threads cut on the entire length and which joins like a shaft and coupling etc.i don't know what that screw is called so can't give you the name.just wanted to know about them.Thank you.
Maybe you were thinking of...
Ball screw?
Acme screw?
Axial screw?
Screw shaft?
All thread?
Wow 😱
backrow!
The fully threaded ones are called “set screws” not bolts! The partly threaded ones are called bolts.
Can you tell me what a hex bolt measuring 29" long...yes 29 inches long, is used for. Grade 5 head cap, the bottom has 2" for which a nut goes on. I found 4 of them stashed away in an old shed. Husband 89 yrs. old, pasted away last year, so I can't asked him. Thanks for any info you can give.
call them carriage bolts, stove bolts or simply bolts, if you are looking for a particular bolt or any other related products such as screws or other fasteners, you will definitely get it at www.chawlaindustries.in !
Niceeeeee...
Good video =)
But dam... what u americans are complicated with the inch tread thing.. :P
At 8:30 we learn about BMWs
so,basically machine screw is nothing but a bolt??
I'd call those things Carridge Bolts, not Stove Bolts.
I'm looking to replace bolts for fastening plastic engine cover in an Acura. Plan to buy from hardware store instead of from dealer. Specs call for "6 x 28". Does this mean 6mm diameter x 28mm length. If pitch isn't specified, does it default to 1mm? Thanks if anyone can help.
Yes, that sounds about right since it's a Japanese car, the bolts would be metric.
+www.Inspectorbots.com Thanks!
The ones @ 06:20, "designated by a number", a bit more on that? That's not a diameter anymore....
8-32 means 32 tpi and what is 8? Not inches, not 16ths not 32ds... It's like 5/32nds on an inch, how do you get from that to "8"? It doesn't seem to mean anything...
Mumbai fastener is media for India🇮🇳 Fastener industry.. I Like your video... If you want to published any fastener tech data welcome we can published it for free...
tell about Allen keybolt and Allen key.
Leave good comments ? okay ...lol good video
always thought machine screws are for steel or iron. not sure why even used on wood they are still called machine screw
Wouldn't it be a lag screw not a lag bolt?