Which is the best thread style and type I can cut on a 0.02 thick 347 stainless hollow cylinder on the inside?
I want an extremely tight joint.
Thanks!!
Knowing very little about diameter/pressure/material, you could roll a grove and use a Victaulic clamp/cap. Vics are used for Sched. 5 S.S. but your wall is even thinner, it’s a risk. The advantage is no metal removal, so no reduction in wall thickness. Depending on diameter, failure will be burst of the cylinder or swaging of the pipe end.
There is a specific Unified series of threads specifically intended for thin-wall tubing. Diameters run from 1/4" to 1" and the pitch is 27 tpi. It is a UNS thread, but it is included as a "selected combination" in the standard. The sizes are in the Machinery's Handbook. However, I don't think even this thread will work in your application since the threads are deeper than your wall. It's also just a standard machine screw thread, not a sealing pipe thread.
You're going to be limited as to how tight you can make any joint with walls that thin, no matter what the thread. This sounds like an application for an o-ring gland or a brazed joint.
i wonder if he could form his tube onto a thread ?
don't know how tight that'd be, and if the app is "nuke", don't think i'd like to think about it ...
if this is a permanent joint, bonding is a good choice
Forming threads would be better than cutting threads for sure. Without further details about the application we can only speculate.
Is this a one-off item, or production?
Does the joint have to disassembled at a later date?
How much pressure is involved?
A "tight joint" for liquid or gas?
Etcetera, etcetera, etcetera
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