Standard Thread for Rack/Fender Eyelets
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Standard Thread for Rack/Fender Eyelets
Is there a standard thread for rack and fender eyelets. I don't want to buy a bunch of bolts I don't need/go to the hardware store 10 times.
It's an old schwinn mtn bike if that helps
It's an old schwinn mtn bike if that helps
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All of the bikes I've worked on use M5x.8 bolts to fasten racks and fenders to the dropout and fork eyelets.
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A 10-32 will work also and a 4mm allen wrench will fit in those.
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Careful with those 10-32 bolts! A #10 screw is just enough smaller in diameter than a 5mm screw that it'll strip the threads in the hole pretty easily. Instead of torquing the 10-32 screw in very tightly, I use a drop of blue loktite and just snug the screw in place.
Regards,
Bob P.
Regards,
Bob P.
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Why not just use a 5mm bolt? It's not like they are very hard to find. Any decent hardware store will have them, or get a couple of friends together and buy a box from mcmaster.com. Using a #10 in a 5mm hole is like using vise grips instead of a wrench. Sure it will work, but you're going to damage stuff.
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Careful with those 10-32 bolts! A #10 screw is just enough smaller in diameter than a 5mm screw that it'll strip the threads in the hole pretty easily. Instead of torquing the 10-32 screw in very tightly, I use a drop of blue loktite and just snug the screw in place.
Regards,
Bob P.
Regards,
Bob P.
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Why not just use a 5mm bolt? It's not like they are very hard to find. Any decent hardware store will have them, or get a couple of friends together and buy a box from mcmaster.com. Using a #10 in a 5mm hole is like using vise grips instead of a wrench. Sure it will work, but you're going to damage stuff.
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ACE, Lowes, Home Depot and OSH all carry metric fasteners. I can understand why they may have been hard to find 20 years ago, but even GM has been using a handful of metric fasteners for 10 years (which I discovered changing the brake pads on a 97 pontiac).
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Longer than that. I had a 1978 Pontiac Grand Am that had a mix of metric and SAE fasteners. Apparenly the more recently redesigned components were metric and the older ones SAE. The general rule was if the bolt had a blue painted head, it was metric.
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Interesting. I assumed the difference between metric and SAE parts was where they had been sourced. I guess the lesson here is that auto parts stores have always been a good place to find metric fasteners.
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However, after talking to the machinist (and fellow bike rider) here at work, he was very surprised at how close the thread pitch and the diameter of the bolt are. He said that for a short bolt, like a rack bolt, there wouldn't be any issue. The diameter is 5000th's smaller but, for certain applications, they often drill their holes that much larger prior to tapping them so as not to break taps. He wouldn't suggest it for a bolt that has to go into something an inch or more but for a short thread like a braze-on fitting, it won't hurt anything and will hold just fine.
Something else to consider, if you don't want to chase the threads or don't have the taps to do it, bikes are painted after the braze-ons go on. I have yet to see one that has had the threads chased after painting so the hole size is even smaller than the M5 should use. A smaller diameter bolt is easier to put in then the larger M5 would be.
Essentially, a 10-32 isn't going to hurt anything. It certainly isn't a 'visegrip vs a proper wrench'.
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The pitch is shockingly similar. 10-32 = 32 threads per inch. M5x0.8 = 0.8 mm / thread. 1/0.8 = 1.25 threads per mm. 1.25mm * 25.4mm/in = 31.75 threads per inch.
They both use a 60deg angle on the threads.
Pitch diameter of 10-32 is 0.1697". M5x0.8 is 4.480mm = 0.1763".
10-32 UNF-2A (external thread) Major diameter= 0.1891" max - 0.1831" min
M5x0.8 Major diameter female = 5mm = 0.1969"
That gives you about 0.010" overlap, where normaly on a M5 thread you'd have 0.017-0.018" overlap. So, approx. half.
Mind you, except maybe water bottles, the majority of fender and rack mountings are largely subject to radial as opposed to axial forces. So, in general, you should be alright, but in my opinion you'd might as well us a proper M5 bolt if you can.
They both use a 60deg angle on the threads.
Pitch diameter of 10-32 is 0.1697". M5x0.8 is 4.480mm = 0.1763".
10-32 UNF-2A (external thread) Major diameter= 0.1891" max - 0.1831" min
M5x0.8 Major diameter female = 5mm = 0.1969"
That gives you about 0.010" overlap, where normaly on a M5 thread you'd have 0.017-0.018" overlap. So, approx. half.
Mind you, except maybe water bottles, the majority of fender and rack mountings are largely subject to radial as opposed to axial forces. So, in general, you should be alright, but in my opinion you'd might as well us a proper M5 bolt if you can.
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On a lot of parts we manufacture where I work, we'll cast one hole size and use it for both M5 and #10 tapped finished products. Note that we do use the appropriate taps though. I have installed #10 screws in M5 holes before but I'm pretty sure it was by accident. You can definitely feel that something is wrong although on a bike frame with paint in the threads, you'd be hard pressed to notice.
FWIW, I've never had a problem finding metric hardware in the past 15 or so years that I've had a use for it. Napa stores are a terrific source for hardware when you don't have time for mailorder.
If you ever want to tell if a bolt is metric or standard, an easy way to tell is to check for marking on the bolt head. Steel metric bolts using a numerical system for their strength rating (common ratings are 5.8, 8.8, 10.9, and 12.9). Stainless steel metric bolts are generally marked by their material (genereally A2 or A4 for 18-8 or 316 stainless respectively). Steel standard bolts using a dashed marking system that I'm very unfamiliar with only because the relatively moderns cars (mid 80's and up) I've worked on (where most of my wrenching is done) all use metric hardware, save for my parents' Canadian-built 1988 Suburban which uses a mix. Stainless steel standard bolts (and sometimes washers) can be found marked with the actual stainless steel type (such as "316"). If it's unmarked, it could be either.
FWIW, I've never had a problem finding metric hardware in the past 15 or so years that I've had a use for it. Napa stores are a terrific source for hardware when you don't have time for mailorder.
If you ever want to tell if a bolt is metric or standard, an easy way to tell is to check for marking on the bolt head. Steel metric bolts using a numerical system for their strength rating (common ratings are 5.8, 8.8, 10.9, and 12.9). Stainless steel metric bolts are generally marked by their material (genereally A2 or A4 for 18-8 or 316 stainless respectively). Steel standard bolts using a dashed marking system that I'm very unfamiliar with only because the relatively moderns cars (mid 80's and up) I've worked on (where most of my wrenching is done) all use metric hardware, save for my parents' Canadian-built 1988 Suburban which uses a mix. Stainless steel standard bolts (and sometimes washers) can be found marked with the actual stainless steel type (such as "316"). If it's unmarked, it could be either.
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Important question: I need, for a vintage computer (Horizon), four imperial-threaded fasteners. No metric fastener will fit - and I don't want to destroy/strip the threads in the case. Where from can I order imperial fasteners (I live in Europe)? Remember, I need only 4 - that means, some shops won't even bother to answer me.
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Even though this thread is long dead, I have a Falcon from the mid to late 70s that not only has imperial threads, but they aren't even the same. The fork ends were 10-32 and the dropouts were 8-32. Goofy Brits!
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Back to the OP's question. Why not get a few of each M5, M6 and save the second trip as well as have some misc. hardware for the next project.
To tangent away from the OP- who here remembers the Raleigh eyelets with 5x.9 threading? Andy
To tangent away from the OP- who here remembers the Raleigh eyelets with 5x.9 threading? Andy
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Another excellent source for Stainless Metric fasteners is WestMarine or any boating supply house. They don't always have hex headed screws in all sizes, but they usually have M5s. As long as you are not fastening to aluminum, they are superior fastenings. In those rare circumstances, I use dielectric compound to prevent electrolytic "seizing".
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Do you know of a source for 5x.9 bolts?
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Not without doing some homework. But I haven't had to worry about this for a few decades as that size is pretty much a non issue. Even if eyes were made for a 5x.9 thread the lack of significant overlap (number of engaging threads) and generally sloppy thread cutting common to bike drop outs means that a M5 likely would fit.
Now if you're running in a bottle cage bolt with 6+mm of engagement then that's another issue. (And I've never seen that). Andy
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Of the bikes in my collection, almost all have M5 x 0.8 threads for the fenders and racks. The exception is Giant made Schwinn World Tourist which have M6 x 1.0 threads. I am also aware of other Giant manufactured Schwinn models having M6 x 1.0 threads.