Re:
Thanks for clarifying, CBguy, and for 'going the extra mile' in the first place!
Yeah I'm curious about this too. Of course some frames which didn't start out with this sort of binder bolt housing have acquired it as a 'repair' of a failed pressed steel housing/Campag style bolt, or just as a fairly inexpensive upgrade at (p)respray time, possibly before they were five years old.
I have read that Holdsworth was criticized for using odd sizes.
Does 'odd' = 'BSF'? Makes me wonder who was doing the criticising and where/when? 'Odd' in what context? I think BA/BSW/BSF would have been the default 'general engineering' threads in the UK, from early 20th century probably more or less until the end of the '70s.
It occurs to me that when this style of binder bolt was the 'new thing' in the UK, British industry was still far from metricisation, and high-ish grade BSF bolts (and taps) would probably have been more easily sourced than any alternative.
A telling quote frome here:
http://jag-lovers.org/xk-lovers/library ... ystem.html
" In 1965 the British Standards Institution approved a policy statement urging British industry to regard BSW, BSF, and BA as obsolescent, to be gradually replaced by International Standards Organization (ISO) metric thread."
And note that the word is 'obsolescent', which is different from 'obsolete'. The quote fairly reeks of temporising around the no doubt widespread antipathy to 'going metric'- the upheaval of it and questionable utility of it.
..but those who did 'go metric', willingly or not, were bound to criticise those who resisted, and vice versa.
Anyhow, BSF bolts might have proved a PITA when the machines were exported to the USA- perhaps some folk lost the bolt, or wanted to change the bolt to some boutique titanium thing, and found themselves with a tpi/thread form conflict- but at least the USA is 'imperial'.. Imagine me forgetting to pack a 3/16" Allen key and trying to get my saddle height adjusted in Europe- a 5mm Allen key is about 9thou too big across flats..