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Thickness WeightGauge Frac. Inch Dec. Inch mm oz/ft^2 lb/ft^2 kg/ft^2 kg/m^2 lb/m^20000000 1/2 .5 12.7 320 20.00 9.072 97.65 215.28000000 15/32 .46875 11.90625 300 18.75 8.505 91.55 201.8200000 7/16 .4375 11.1125 280 17.50 7.983 85.44 188.370000 13/32 .40625 10.31875 260 16.25 7.371 79.33 174.91000 3/8 .375 9.525 240 15 6.804 73.24 161.4600 11/32 .34375 8.73125 220 13.75 6.237 67.13 148.000 5/16 .3125 7.9375 200 12.50 5.67 61.03 134.551 9/32 .28125 7.14375 180 11.25 5.103 54.93 121.092 17/64 .265625 6.746875 170 10.625 4.819 51.88 114.373 1/4 .25 6.35 160 10 4.536 48.82 107.644 15/64 .234375 5.953125 150 9.375 4.252 45.77 100.915 7/32 .21875 5.55625 140 8.75 3.969 42.72 94.186 13/64 .203125 5.159375 130 8.125 3.685 39.67 87.457 3/16 .1875 4.7625 120 7.5 3.402 36.62 80.728 11/64 .171875 4.365625 110 6.875 3.118 33.57 74.009 5/32 .15625 3.96875 100 6.25 2.835 30.52 67.2710 9/64 .140625 3.571875 90 5.625 2.552 27.46 60.5511 1/8 .125 3.175 80 5 2.268 24.41 53.8212 7/64 .109375 2.778125 70 4.375 1.984 21.36 47.0913 3/32 .09375 2.38125 60 3.75 1.701 18.31 40.3614 5/64 .078125 1.984375 50 3.125 1.417 15.26 33.6415 9/128 .0703125 1.7859375 45 2.8125 1.276 13.73 30.2716 1/16 .0625 1.5875 40 2.5 1.134 12.21 26.9117 9/160 .05625 1.42875 36 2.25 1.021 10.99 24.2218 1/20 .05 1.27 32 2 .9072 9.765 21.5319 7/160 .04375 1.11125 28 1.75 .7938 8.544 18.8420 3/80 .0375 .9525 24 1.50 .6804 7.324 16.1521 11/320 .034375 .873125 22 1.375 .6237 6.713 14.8022 1/32 .03125 .793750 20 1.25 .567 6.103 13.4623 9/320 .028125 .714375 18 1.125 .5103 5.493 12.1124 1/40 .025 .635 16 1 .4536 4.882 10.7625 7/320 .021875 .555625 14 .875 .3969 4.272 9.4226 3/160 .01875 .47625 12 .75 .3402 3.662 8.0727 11/640 .0171875 .4365625 11 .6875 .3119 3.357 7.4028 1/64 .015625 .396875 10 .625 .2835 3.052 6.7329 9/640 .0140625 .3571875 9 .5625 .2551 2.746 6.0530 1/80 .0125 .3175 8 .5 .2268 2.441 5.3831 7/640 .0109375 .2778125 7 .4375 .1984 2.136 4.7132 13/1280 .01015625 .25796875 6 1/2 .40625 .1843 1.983 4.3733 3/320 .009375 .238125 6 .375 .1701 1.831 4.0434 11/1280 .00859375 .21828125 5 1/2 .34375 .1559 1.678 3.7035 5/640 .0078125 .1984375 5 .3125 .1417 1.526 3.3636 9/1280 .00703125 .17859375 4 1/2 .28125 .1276 1.373 3.0337 17/2560 .006640625 .168671875 4 1/4 .265625 .1205 1.297 2.8738 1/160 .00625 .15875 4 .25 .1134 1.221 2.69Last edited by vipermanz; 07-25-2005 at 05:15 PM.StangnetShop Full Of Stuff. Joey
Reply:http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/h...6----000-.htmlStangnetShop Full Of Stuff. Joey
Reply:Just out of curiosity does anyone know what gauge aluminum foil is?
Reply:atrain, According to the Aluminum Association;aluminum foil is considered "less than .006"plate = 1/4" or moresheet = .249" to .006"foil = less than .006"I just found this out last night, then I see this post today, so there you have it .
Reply:thanks chuck
Reply:Great information, thanks. I formatted it into Word so I could print and post it. Sheez, allergies, keep me up all night....Okay, I made the file smaller, so I could upload it. You can put your own title on it. Attached FilesThicknessMetal.doc (101.5 KB, 3684 views)Last edited by Bobcatter; 04-16-2006 at 02:10 AM.
Reply:Thanks - for your efforts getting all the info to line up in "word". A real good refernce!
Reply:Does anyone know what the gauge of typical car body metal is ? Uhmmm particuliarly the older vehicles like a TR-8 ??
Reply:newer cars can go to 26gage but most older are closer to 18.thanks for the chart, verry helpfull. summer is here, plant a tree for mother earth. if you dont have time or space, sponcer some one else to plant one for you.feel free to shoot me a PM or e-mail me at [email][email protected] i got lots of time.
Reply:Had to save that. Thanks for the chart!
Reply:My thanks to Vipermanz and Bobcatter for the chart. I printed off 2,one for my shop and one to make bets on how thick 10 ga is. Everyone i've ever talked about it w/ has always said it is 1/8", including myself!!!! Thanks again, MikeOl' Stonebreaker "Experience is the name everyone gives to their mistakes"Hobart G-213 portableMiller 175 migMiller thunderbolt ac/dc stick Victor O/A setupMakita chop saw
Reply:i allways thought 10 gauge was 3.2mm thats what the old guys refer to in old money welding rods 12 gauge was 2.5
Reply:I found this online at davesport.comGrade and Description Chemistry Tensile Yield Rockwell Hardness Units typical ksi ksi typical 1010ERW tube C .08-.13 Mn .30-.60 P .035 max S .035 max 45 32 RB55 min 1020DOM tube C .15-.25 Mn .30-.60 P .040 max S .050 max 80 70 RB80 4130DOM tube (chromoly) C .28-.33 Mn .40-.60 P .035 S .040 Si .15-.35 Cr .80-1.10 Mo .15-.25 100 90 RB90 As you can see, DOM tubing is nearly twice as strong in tension, and more than twice as strong in resistance to bending in comparison to the ERW tube. Also, the 4130 chromoly tube is only 20% stronger than standard DOM in tension. Weights of typical tubing sizesOutside Diameter Wall thickness Inside Diameter Type Weight, lbs/ft. Wgt/80ft. 1.25" 0.120 1.010" HREW/DOM 1.448 116 1.375" 0.120 1.135" HREW/DOM 1.608 128.6 1.5" 0.095" 1.310 HREW/DOM 1.426 114 1.5" 0.120" 1.260" HREW/DOM 1.769 141.5 1.75" 0.109" (FIA) 1.532" DOM 1.910 152.8 1.75" 0.120" 1.510" HREW/DOM 2.089 167.1 GaugeNumber Thickness (Inches) Pounds Per Sq. Ft. Nominal Tolerance Range 10 .1345 .1405 to .1285 5.48695 11 .1196 .1256 to .1136 4.87911 12 .1046 .1106 to .0986 4.26718 13 .0897 .0947 to .0847 3.65933 14 .0747 .0797 to .0697 3.04740 15 .0673 .0723 to .0623 2.74552 16 .0598 .0648 to .0548 2.43955 17 .0538 .0578 to .0498 2.19478 18 .0478 .0518 to .0438 1.95001 19 .0418 .0458 to .0378 1.70524 20 .0359 .0389 to .0329 1.46455 21 .0329 .0359 to .0299 1.34216 22 .0299 .0329 to .0269 1.21978 23 .0269 .0299 to .0239 1.09739 24 .0239 .0269 to .0209 .97501 25 .0209 .0239 to .0179 .85262 26 .0179 .0199 to .0159 .73023 27 .0164 .0184 to .0144 .66094Always looking for another old VW, especially in the southeast.
Reply:Thanks guysGreat infos
Reply:Can someone PLEASE explain to me why I didn't find this message board until last week, when I really needed all this info 3 weeks ago??? Hee Hee
Reply:Great info... Saving most of it...
Reply:well at first glance one would think this is very helpful. BUT all it really dose if confuse you even more ???none of the #'s match ???what chart do we trust ?? vipermanz...............VS................bugdustCOLOR="blue"]vipermanz[/COLOR]...............20 3/80 .0375 27 11/640 .0171875 15 9/128 .0703125 VS................bugdust20 .035927 .016415 .0673at first i just thought it was a simple question of rounding it up to keep the # from going on forever, but???? 20 gage .0375 and 20 gage .0359 are way to far to be rounding for simplicity sake ?? so what gives ?? must be a tolerance thing ??the only solution i see is .... summer is here, plant a tree for mother earth. if you dont have time or space, sponcer some one else to plant one for you.feel free to shoot me a PM or e-mail me at [email][email protected] i got lots of time.
Reply:blow this up 2x to read itLast edited by Magnetic Mechanic; 01-31-2008 at 12:29 PM.Reason: no explanation
Reply:very helpful!!!!! printed a copy for the tool box... Thanks everyone
Reply:In the start window I get the button 'Try It' which I clicked. But it still ends after 10 minutes.
Reply:Just to point out ferrous metal sheet and aluminum sheet gauge numbers refer to different thicknesses, meaning 10 ga. steel sheet is different thickness that 10 ga aluminum sheet. Though there are several good sources on the web, I like Aircraft Spruce and Specialty's info sheets out of their online catalog. The catalog is worth having just for the info, just like the old Starrett catalogs, verituble encyclopedias of measuring and setup info. Try this page:http://www.aircraftspruce.com/catalo...metalinfo1.php
Reply:Originally Posted by BobcatterGreat information, thanks. I formatted it into Word so I could print and post it. Sheez, allergies, keep me up all night....Okay, I made the file smaller, so I could upload it. You can put your own title on it.
Reply:Machinery's Handbook has these plus other 'odd' and British standards too. It is a very good reference book, although having the chart printed out for your wall or toolbox is also a great idea. Well, after doing a search here, I see that the Handbook has been mentioned on site fairly regularly, so I won't say more now.
Reply:The chart is going on my wall and I will be handing out copies to my students....It well be a lesson in the making...I always used my pipe fitting book to look up thicknesses...this chart puts all the info in one spot...THANKSJonesy
Reply:Wow all this time and i didnt even notice this thread. I just printed one out. Thanks alot!!!Ya gotta spend money to make money!Thanks printed out 2 copies and laminated them to put in my tool box
Reply:Originally Posted by BobcatterGreat information, thanks. I formatted it into Word so I could print and post it. Sheez, allergies, keep me up all night....Okay, I made the file smaller, so I could upload it. You can put your own title on it.
Reply:Charts attached. Attached Filesal weight.doc (106.5 KB, 271 views)sm Gauge.doc (109.0 KB, 311 views)sm weight.doc (99.5 KB, 216 views)A butterfly without wings, is just an ugly bug
Reply:Here is the table from the original post with improved formatting:Code:Thickness WeightGauge Frac. Inch mm oz/ft^2 lb/ft^2 kg/ft^2 kg/m^2 lb/m^20000000 1/2 .5 12.7 320 20.00 9.072 97.65 215.28000000 15/32 .46875 11.90625 300 18.75 8.505 91.55 201.8200000 7/16 .4375 11.1125 280 17.50 7.983 85.44 188.370000 13/32 .40625 10.31875 260 16.25 7.371 79.33 174.91000 3/8 .375 9.525 240 15 6.804 73.24 161.4600 11/32 .34375 8.73125 220 13.75 6.237 67.13 148.000 5/16 .3125 7.9375 200 12.50 5.67 61.03 134.551 9/32 .28125 7.14375 180 11.25 5.103 54.93 121.092 17/64 .265625 6.746875 170 10.625 4.819 51.88 114.373 1/4 .25 6.35 160 10 4.536 48.82 107.644 15/64 .234375 5.953125 150 9.375 4.252 45.77 100.915 7/32 .21875 5.55625 140 8.75 3.969 42.72 94.186 13/64 .203125 5.159375 130 8.125 3.685 39.67 87.457 3/16 .1875 4.7625 120 7.5 3.402 36.62 80.728 11/64 .171875 4.365625 110 6.875 3.118 33.57 74.009 5/32 .15625 3.96875 100 6.25 2.835 30.52 67.2710 9/64 .140625 3.571875 90 5.625 2.552 27.46 60.5511 1/8 .125 3.175 80 5 2.268 24.41 53.8212 7/64 .109375 2.778125 70 4.375 1.984 21.36 47.0913 3/32 .09375 2.38125 60 3.75 1.701 18.31 40.3614 5/64 .078125 1.984375 50 3.125 1.417 15.26 33.6415 9/128 .0703125 1.7859375 45 2.8125 1.276 13.73 30.2716 1/16 .0625 1.5875 40 2.5 1.134 12.21 26.9117 9/160 .05625 1.42875 36 2.25 1.021 10.99 24.2218 1/20 .05 1.27 32 2 .9072 9.765 21.5319 7/160 .04375 1.11125 28 1.75 .7938 8.544 18.8420 3/80 .0375 .9525 24 1.50 .6804 7.324 16.1521 11/320 .034375 .873125 22 1.375 .6237 6.713 14.8022 1/32 .03125 .793750 20 1.25 .567 6.103 13.4623 9/320 .028125 .714375 18 1.125 .5103 5.493 12.1124 1/40 .025 .635 16 1 .4536 4.882 10.7625 7/320 .021875 .555625 14 .875 .3969 4.272 9.4226 3/160 .01875 .47625 12 .75 .3402 3.662 8.0727 11/640 .0171875 .4365625 11 .6875 .3119 3.357 7.4028 1/64 .015625 .396875 10 .625 .2835 3.052 6.7329 9/640 .0140625 .3571875 9 .5625 .2551 2.746 6.0530 1/80 .0125 .3175 8 .5 .2268 2.441 5.3831 7/640 .0109375 .2778125 7 .4375 .1984 2.136 4.7132 13/1280 .01015625 .25796875 6 1/2 .40625 .1843 1.983 4.3733 3/320 .009375 .238125 6 .375 .1701 1.831 4.0434 11/1280 .00859375 .21828125 5 1/2 .34375 .1559 1.678 3.7035 5/640 .0078125 .1984375 5 .3125 .1417 1.526 3.3636 9/1280 .00703125 .17859375 4 1/2 .28125 .1276 1.373 3.0337 17/2560 .006640625 .168671875 4 1/4 .265625 .1205 1.297 2.8738 1/160 .00625 .15875 4 .25 .1134 1.221 2.69
Reply:according to the charts, our modern cars are 1/32" thick skin...(.22ga.) I don't think the older cars were 18 ga. as stated , I was told the 50 ish cars were 20ga... anyway 1/32" sounds scary.....
Reply:I was needing this info about 2 weeks ago,I printed 1 out and saved it on my computer for future copiesMaxus Pro-125 MigChicago Electric 90 amp DC flux-coreLincoln Electric AC 225 tombstoneO/A torchM/O mini-torch10 acres of flatland15 acres of holler
Reply:anyone else find it interesting that a square foot of 1/2" thick steel is EXACTLY 20.00 lbs?Pretty cool!
Reply:http://www.google.com/products/catal...&ved=0CBIQrRI#i've been using one of these for a long, long time.if you can work with fractions and you know that steel is app 40 lbs per ft sq, then it is pretty easy to convert to whatever you are dealing with.ie .125/1/8th is equal to 5lbs per ft sq .062/1/16th us equal to half of that.after a while you can do them in your head. at least you can ball park a weight this way.
Reply:Originally Posted by fdcmiamihttp://www.google.com/products/catal...&ved=0CBIQrRI#i've been using one of these for a long, long time.if you can work with fractions and you know that steel is app 40 lbs per ft sq, then it is pretty easy to convert to whatever you are dealing with.ie .125/1/8th is equal to 5lbs per ft sq .062/1/16th us equal to half of that.after a while you can do them in your head. at least you can ball park a weight this way.
Reply:Thanks. This is really good to know, especially the weight per square foot.Matthew MortonTexas A&M '06Logsdon Seminary '13"Who Dares Wins""AFTF""WH2PH"SA 200 (Code: 5337)TB 302CP 302 w/22A Wire FeederMillerMatic 200Miller Syncrowave 200MillerMatic 252BurnTables 4x4 CNC MachineHypertherm 65 |
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