ponytug
Super Member
Which British pipe thread? Tapered or parallel? BA, BSC, BAF, BSW, BSPP/BSP, BSPT?Does that include British Pipe Thread? Man I can stand it when they use that.
But, yes, drives me crazy. Add in the hydraulic variations and, I have spent way too much of my life with thread gauges and micrometers. And then I think that there is a special place for the designers who mix metric, SAE, and British threads on the same item.
With Whitworth, I was always grabbing the wrong size wrench, as the wrenches were labeled with the bolt diameter, rather than the head diameter, I.e. a "3/4" diameter thread bolt could have two different whitworth cap sizes, neither of which is 0.75"

British Standard Whitworth - Wikipedia
I'm not a particular fan of one system over another (e.g. SAE vs metric), but the chaos of the British pipe and fastener systems reminds me of their fondness for their old currency system, with farthings, ha'pennies, pennies, groats, six pence, shillings, half crowns, florins, pounds, guineas, and the whole treasury vs bank notes. They held out against decimalizing their currency for decades because they were of the view that decimals were too complicated. (Yum, yes, of course, "indubitably my good man"...Sure)
Understanding old British money - pounds, shillings and pence
projectbritain.com
So, yes, probably all of one piece (but not of eight...).
All the best,
Peter
P.S. let's not forget the SAE number, letter, fractional drill and tap complexities.