Bill,
Thank you for your reply,
I am still investigating the life and work of Whitworth and I will inform you later on.
In the mean time I found a copy of a book with more than 220 pages on the internet: "Miscellaneous papers on Mechanical subjects" by no one less than Joseph Whitworth F.R.S. printed in 1858. For those who are interested:
http://books.google.com May I use this occasion to ask you some further questions:
1. The P1862 and P1863 Enfield-Whitworth rifles were heavy. Can you tell me the exact weights?
2. Was the high weight of the rifle needed for the high pressure, or what else was the reason. It's remarkable because committees of all countries demanded rifles that did not exceed a certain weight. Soldiers could otherwise not march long distances. It seems stupid of Joseph that the military Whitworth was so heavy.
3. Whitworth patented the strong Fluid Compressed Steel in 1874. As you know, this steel was stronger than �normal� Bessemer steel. You published "Miscellaneous papers on Mechanical subjects, Guns and Steel� by Joseph Whitworth F.R.S. printed in 1858 on the website of research press. I would like to have the chapters about artillery and fluid compressed steel also. Is there a possibility to get these chapters?
With regards,
Jan van Gelderen
http://OldMilitaryRifles.EU Quote from Bill_Curtis on 09/22/07 at 4:09pm:Google comes up with this :- "Metal connective screws appeared as late as in the 15th century. The first known use of the today�s screw slot is attributed to a German watchmaker in 1513. Hexagon nuts appeared in the 2nd half of the 16th century. Screws were hand-made and the threads were made by file. Not until Henry Maudslay improved the lathe carriage (i.e. the part of lathe to which the tool is fastened) could the lathe be subsequently - after the year of 1800 - modified to cut the threads as well. As a result, Maudslay could manufacture the precise screws for engineering demands as early as around 1820. Joseph Whitworth was another Englishman who, 10 years later, played an important role in further accuracy improvement during cutting the screw threads. He was the one who initiated the standardization of screw threads in 1841 so the screws and nuts manufactured anywhere around the world would fit together. At the same time, he improved the semiautomatic machines for thread cutting, the so-called threading machines. This standard is still being used in the Anglo-Saxon world as the Whitworth Thread Standard. The so-called Metric Threads are being used in the rest of countries. "
Whitworth standardised British threads as Sellers standardised American threads. �He used hexagon nuts because they make far more sense, �are easier to use than square nuts and his precision machinery made them more accurately.
The Whitworth Pattern of 1862 differed from that of 1863 by having a 36 inch barrel, lock marked MANCHESTER ORDNANCE & RIFLE Co. and a bayonet bar for the rectangular slotted bayonet rather than the round slot of the 1863 bayonet. �These rifles were made by Whitworth rather that at Enfield.