I am sorry; I believe I must question this. All of my time in engineering I have seen surfaces called out to threads. SAE standard J514(Hydraulic Tube Fittings) Sept 2004, for example, clearly shows fitting features called to the thread pitch. I have seen it in Parker catalogs, ISO standards, bearing locknut threads, etc. Almost every time a question like this is asked of GD&T people they hem and haw, say well maybe these people don't understand proper applications or something like that. I have seen it too long to believe it any more, plus it think it passes "do it seem reasonable to you", test.
What I consider to be a large disconnect in GD&T is caused, in part, I believe, by this kind of wink wink well maybe “they just don't know what they are doing” if it is not politically popular with whomever you are speaking with. It seems reasonable, to me, that these applications want what is specified, whether it is popular or easy to check.
My trainer used to say if you measure a football field does it matter which end you start with? If you want to turn it around go ahead but don’t say he doesn’t want what he wants
Do you know how hard it is to find these final numbers, or how lucky we are to finally have this kind of information?
Do we really care which comes first, in the end, is that what you believe down deep?
I know lots of people don’t know what they are doing, to so quickly undercut the ones that seem reasonable undercuts the progress we have made.
Frank