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Taper pin

Fastener consisting of a conical rod with a shallow taper which is forced into a hole

Taper pin

Summary

Fastener consisting of a conical rod with a shallow taper which is forced into a hole

An example of tapered pin used to lock two shafts together.

A taper pin is a fastener used in mechanical engineering. They are steel rods with one end having a slightly larger diameter than the other.

Metric taper pins have a taper of 1:50. A 1:50 taper means that one end of a 50 mm long bar will be 1 mm smaller in diameter than the other end. Inch-sized taper pins have a slightly smaller taper taper on diameter of 1:48 A 1:48 taper means that one end of a 4-foot-long bar (48 inches) will be 1 inch smaller in diameter than the other end, or a -inch taper over a 1-foot length.

Threaded pins

Some taper pins have a male screw thread on the small end that is designed to project through the hole and retain the pin with a washer and a nut. Other pins are threaded on both ends, on the thick end to pull the pin out with the same nut that holds the pin in place.

Taper pin reamers

Taper pin reamers are designed to prepare the hole for taper pins. Metric taper reamers are designated by the small diameter. For example, a 2 mm taper pin reamer has a 1.9 mm small end (2 mm nominal size) and a 2.86 mm large end.

Clock pins

A form of taper pin that precedes these standards is the clock pin, used to accurately and repeatably register parts of a clock to one another. Clock pins do not have a standardised taper, but they generally have a more pronounced taper than the standard engineering pins. The size or gauge is defined by diameter at each end, and the length. The holes are not reamed, but are prepared using a clockmakers' cutting broach to taper a drilled hole.

References

References

  1. Newnes Mechanical Engineer's Pocket Book
  2. [[Machinery's Handbook]]
  3. [http://www.newmantools.com/reamer/r275m.htm Newman Tools Inc., metric taper pin reamers]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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