What size should I order, How do I know it will fit?. There are many cases where accurate measuring of a
diameter or a thread will solve a problem. How to measure and identify a thread. There are two systems in use
today, The English and Metric. Most foreign made lenses and shutters produced after 1945 use the Metric system of
threads and measurement. A metric screw thread is specified by how far, in millimeters it advances in one turn of the screw.
For example, if one turn of a filter brings it 1 mm closer to the lens then it is called "M1.0". It is the distance from one peak
of the thread to the next one. This number is referred to as "The Pitch"
The most popular metric threads are: M.5, M.75, M.9, M1.0, M 1.25. The usual filter thread in
medium size filters is M.75.
English threads are specified by how many peaks there are in one inch of the length. They are specified as "Threads per inch"
written "TPI" The diameter is specified in "thousandths of an inch" The most popular English
threads are: 48 TPI, 40, 36, 32, 30, and 24 TPI
Threads are specified to the outside diameter of a male thread (The "Major Diameter") So, if you measure an outside (male) thread with a caliper
and it comes up "57.85mm" then it is a 58mm thread and, if its a filter, its almost certainly M.75. This is specified: "M-58 X 0.75"
In the case of filter threads the ".75" part is often left off and it is called "A fifty eight millimeter thread"
To identify an inside thread (such as a filter ring on a lens) first take your best guess from
age and origin to determine if its a metric thread then measure the diameter of the female (inside) thread. (The "Minor Diameter") Then add the pitch number
to the measurement. For example if the inside measures 57.2mm add the M .75 to get 57.95 which means "58mm"
In the English system thousandths of an inch are used: Such as the mounting thread of a #4 Ilex shutter : "2.495-30" is the way this is
specified (and its probably intended to be "Two and a Half by Thirty")
The inside diameter is read by measuinrg the inside diameter, in this case 2.465" and adding the corresponding metric pitch number _In this case
.9mm or 0.035" So the inside of the flange measures 2.465", add .035 (for the english approximation of the thread pitch) to get 2.5-30 for the specification.
The thread pitch can be gotten by using gauges or by using known screws as gauges (even if they are different diameters) Hold the known screw agains
the one to be measured to see if it fits. A very slight mismatch means you are
probably using the wrong measurement system. Metric instead of Enlish, or vice versa. It is a common suprise to find older items
of European manufacture made to English specification for the American Market.
Although English and Metric threads are not interchangeable, for the purposes of identification
they correspond M-.5 : (48tpi) M-.75: 32TPI M-.9 (30tpi) M-1.0: 24tpi. (These are not
necessarily the closest English equivalents but the closest
commonly used English threads.) Metric bashers
refer, for example, to an M6-1.25 as "A Metric Quarter-Twenty".
In the case of Photo equipment it is most unlikely that you will ever find a thread other than the eleven mentioned here. So the goal of your thread
measurement is to find out which of these you have on hand.