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Author: Subject: Decimal To Fraction
mistergrumpy

posted on 15/1/11 at 10:45 PM Reply With Quote
Decimal To Fraction

Can anyone help. I'm knackered and need a quick calculation doing but can't seem to get my head around it and it's driving me mad.
I have an M12 bolt which when measured with a vernier caliper comes in at 11mm + (38 x 0.02mm) give or take 1 either way.
I need to convert it to it's imperial fractal equivalent please.

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matt_gsxr

posted on 15/1/11 at 11:02 PM Reply With Quote
I don't quite understand the question, but here is an answer

Here are some mm dimensions close to 12mm.

15/32 = 11.9mm
29/64 = 11.5mm
7/16 = 11.1mm

Matt

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britishtrident

posted on 15/1/11 at 11:03 PM Reply With Quote
Between 7/16" and 1/2"
15/32 is very close but not a standard preferred inch dia.

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RazMan

posted on 15/1/11 at 11:26 PM Reply With Quote
Why are you having to convert back to imperial? Are you trying to get the bolt to fit an old Roman chariot?





Cheers,
Raz

When thinking outside the box doesn't work any more, it's time to build a new box

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matt_gsxr

posted on 15/1/11 at 11:33 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by RazMan
Why are you having to convert back to imperial? Are you trying to get the bolt to fit an old Roman chariot?


Note a Roman foot is 29.6cm (not ~305mm). Maybe that explains the discrepancy.

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Madinventions

posted on 15/1/11 at 11:53 PM Reply With Quote
I made this chart in Excel a long time ago and it's proved invaluable over the years!
Metric imperial conversion cha
Metric imperial conversion cha


Left column is fractions of an inch, top row is whole inches, middle is all metric.
So if you want to convert 5 7/16" to metric, look in the '5' column, and go down to the 7/16 row, answer 138.1mm.
If you want to convert 12mm to imperial, just find 12 on the grid and read the column and row headers. in this case, the nearest is 15/32" as others have said.

HTH,
Ed.





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loggyboy

posted on 16/1/11 at 12:33 AM Reply With Quote
Excel has a fraction fuction (right click on cell, format cell, number = fraction)

11+(38x0.02)=11.76
in inches = 0.462992 = 25/54 (rounded to double figures)

Obviously plaing arround with the 11.76 figure evetually leads to the more common fractions Matt posted

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lewis

posted on 16/1/11 at 09:08 AM Reply With Quote
Or get a zues book.
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designer

posted on 16/1/11 at 09:08 AM Reply With Quote
Download Convert; it's brilliant.

http://www.ppe.com/convert.htm

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mistergrumpy

posted on 16/1/11 at 11:24 AM Reply With Quote
MadInventions. That's great! Going up in the garage that.
The reason I was asking about the conversion is that I was at the Autosport show yesterday and was speaking to McGill Motors about rose joints. I thought that I might price up and have a go at some rose jointed top wishbones. The man on the stall said to go for the black high misalignment joints on the site and they only seem to come in imperial sizes and I currently have M12 bolts on my suspension.

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RazMan

posted on 16/1/11 at 11:31 AM Reply With Quote
Probably a good idea to ream them out to 1/2" then - a common fix for that type of size change





Cheers,
Raz

When thinking outside the box doesn't work any more, it's time to build a new box

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mistergrumpy

posted on 16/1/11 at 12:29 PM Reply With Quote
No going back once I ream them out. So 4 x 1/2" rose joints = £32.40 plus whatever steel is.
I was just thinking of something to do on the car now its finished and I've finally got a pay rise at work meaning I have a little spare cash again and I appear to hve been bitten by the bug again after Autosport

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Ninehigh

posted on 16/1/11 at 07:44 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by matt_gsxr
quote:
Originally posted by RazMan
Why are you having to convert back to imperial? Are you trying to get the bolt to fit an old Roman chariot?


Note a Roman foot is 29.6cm (not ~305mm). Maybe that explains the discrepancy.


Iirc a Roman Foot was however long the Emporor's foot at the time was. Hence the term "foot"






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loggyboy

posted on 16/1/11 at 08:21 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Ninehigh
Iirc a Roman Foot was however long the Emporor's foot at the time was. Hence the term "foot"


As with most things, it was the Egyptions that was then taken on by the greeks/romans.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_measurement#History_of_units

(not that wiki is the be all and end all of anything!

[Edited on 16/1/11 by loggyboy]

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