Thanks for the thread info.
I knew Sir Joseph Whitworth helped standardise imperial measurement threads in the UK in 1841, BSP pipe threads are still commonly used and based on the Whitworth standard.
I didn't know that in 1948 the UK, US and Canada agreed to use a common standard (the now very familiar UNC and UNF) that combined the US 60 degree flank (instead of Whitworth 55degree flank) and Whitworth rounded roots/crests, supposedly using the best aspects of both.
It must've been a pita before standardisation in 1841 with different companies all making different threads, which could even differ slightly batch to batch from the same company.
I remember being confused by Whitworth spanner sizes as a kid.
Originally thought it was a #10-24 but asking here seemed an easy way to confirm I wasn't confusing #numbered bolts / UNC / metric. At least I knew it wasn't going to be Whitworth hehe.
Why use a #10-24 when 3/16-24 UNC is so close?