Okay, serious question now-
In what applications are you finding the use of SAE allen screws these days?
In my industry metric took over in the mid 90's.
Okay, serious question now-
In what applications are you finding the use of SAE allen screws these days?
In my industry metric took over in the mid 90's.
Motorcycles, specifically Harley-Davidsons. For most of the hex fasteners, a short non-ball-end works best. But an example fastener that needs a long ball-end hex (1/4") is the shift linkage.
Okay, serious question now-
In what applications are you finding the use of SAE allen screws these days?
In my industry metric took over in the mid 90's.
Oddly my pressure washer uses them, but for me I work on military equipment which all still SAE.
Motorcycles, specifically Harley-Davidsons. For most of the hex fasteners, a short non-ball-end works best. But an example fastener that needs a long ball-end hex (1/4") is the shift linkage.
Motorcycles, specifically Harley-Davidsons. For most of the hex fasteners, a short non-ball-end works best. But an example fastener that needs a long ball-end hex (1/4") is the shift linkage.
The real slick deal here is not buying a crappy Harley.
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In what applications are you finding the use of SAE allen screws these days?
In my industry metric took over in the mid 90's.
In what applications are you finding the use of SAE allen screws these days?
In my industry metric took over in the mid 90's.
In what applications are you finding the use of SAE allen screws these days?
In my industry metric took over in the mid 90's.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Metric or SAE?
The real slick deal here is not buying a crappy Harley.
SAE is still in use in the Electrical field. Lugs in Panels and Transformers use standard hex heads.