The Whitworth thread was the world's first national screw thread standard, devised and specified by
Joseph Whitworth in 1841. Until then, the only standardization was what little had been done by individual people and companies, with some companies'
in-house standards spreading to a limited extent within their industries. Whitworth's new standard specified a 55° thread angle and a thread depth of 0.640327
p and a radius of 0.137329
p, where
p is the pitch. The thread pitch increases with diameter in steps specified on a chart. The Whitworth thread system was later to be adopted as a British Standard to become British Standard Whitworth (BSW). An example of the use of the Whitworth thread are the
Royal Navy's
Crimean War gunboats. These are the first instance of
mass-production techniques being applied to
marine engineering, as the following quotation from the
obituary from
The Times of 24 January 1887 for Sir Joseph Whitworth (1803–1887) shows: An original example of the gunboat type engine was raised from the wreck of the
SS Xantho by the
Western Australian Museum. On disassembly, all its threads were shown to be of the Whitworth type. With the adoption of BSW by British
railway companies, many of which had previously used their own standards both for threads and for bolt head and nut profiles, and the growing need generally for standardisation in manufacturing specifications, it came to dominate British manufacturing. In the US, BSW was replaced when steel bolts replaced iron, but was still being used for some aluminium parts as late as the 1960s and 1970s when
metric-based standards International Inch replaced the U.S. inch and U.K. inch in 1951–1964.
American Unified Coarse (UNC) was originally based on almost the same Imperial fractions. The Unified thread angle is 60° and has flattened crests (Whitworth crests are rounded). From in up to in, thread pitch is the same in both systems except that the thread pitch for the in bolt is 12 threads per inch (tpi) in BSW versus 13 tpi in the UNC. ==Thread form==