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metric bolts???

wedgee

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After numerous trys replacing two set screws that I carelessly misplaced when I disassembled my car(68 roadrunner)...It was determined that they were in fact metric!!
as far as I can tell, these two fixtures had never been apart or even off of the car as I have owned the car since 1980...
can anyone guess what two I'm talking about??. I'm still in dis-beleave about this, would never have thunk it
 
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Hold on, let me think ...........
 
Right?!? the set screws holding the light assembly in the "bullet" turn signals.. they are original equipment.
 
The only Mopar from that time frame with metric fasteners would be a Simca... You need to re-evaluate what you are looking at...
 
Fluke that a 1.0 metric worked in a fine thread standard thread.
1.0 pitch would either be 6mm or fine thread 8mm
6mm is just under 1/4" 1/4" fine thread is 28TPI or .0357 between threads 1.0 is .0393
5/16 is .004 larger than 8mm 5/16 -24 is .04167 between threads...
Both are close but neither is gonna thread on very far...
 
1.0 pitch would either be 6mm or fine thread 8mm
6mm is just under 1/4" 1/4" fine thread is 28TPI or .0357 between threads 1.0 is .0393
5/16 is .004 larger than 8mm 5/16 -24 is .04167 between threads...
Both are close but neither is gonna thread on very far...
Point was it's a fluke they fit,. There are zero ORIGINAL metric fasteners on a '68.
 
IDK. dont like the thought myself. Im gonna double check them again again
 
I am OK with my old cars that use SAE hardware. I can deal with a car that uses all metric hardware. When it is mixed (like in a number of 90's era USA made vehicles) , it is a total PITA! Constant guessing between the two.

What bugs me is that now a number of reproduction or replacement pieces for our old cars are now coming with metric fasteners. WTF - why??? I have seen this is many cases. Lately on an alternator as well as ball joints for a 69. This forces a mix of metric and SAE fasteners that I despise.
 
I am OK with my old cars that use SAE hardware. I can deal with a car that uses all metric hardware. When it is mixed (like in a number of 90's era USA made vehicles) , it is a total PITA! Constant guessing between the two.

What bugs me is that now a number of reproduction or replacement pieces for our old cars are now coming with metric fasteners. WTF - why??? I have seen this is many cases. Lately on an alternator as well as ball joints for a 69. This forces a mix of metric and SAE fasteners that I despise.
And , most hotrod parts are metric now , burns my *** , but all mixed on my 68 fastback now...
 
I am OK with my old cars that use SAE hardware. I can deal with a car that uses all metric hardware. When it is mixed (like in a number of 90's era USA made vehicles) , it is a total PITA! Constant guessing between the two.

What bugs me is that now a number of reproduction or replacement pieces for our old cars are now coming with metric fasteners. WTF - why??? I have seen this is many cases. Lately on an alternator as well as ball joints for a 69. This forces a mix of metric and SAE fasteners that I despise.
X2
 
After numerous trys replacing two set screws that I carelessly misplaced when I disassembled my car(68 roadrunner)...It was determined that they were in fact metric!!
as far as I can tell, these two fixtures had never been apart or even off of the car as I have owned the car since 1980...
can anyone guess what two I'm talking about??. I'm still in dis-beleave about this, would never have thunk it
Nope!
 
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