. Go to the Edison website. You can buy direct and they have a nice knurled nut the you will likeWho was the mfg?
Hunter and Edson do not make 'nuts'; they buy nuts ... All commercially available nuts are machined and formed to a specific few thread profiles used by ALL machinists and manufacturers.??? Why not order the nut from the manufacturer Hunter gave him?? Using the part number he was given??
. Rich that's just NUTS. My steering wheel nut is plastic and has the word EDSON molded in. You can't get a capnut like that at a hardware store. Maybe you can get one that works but to bring it up to original condition get the real thing. Pay whatever it costs then install it and sit back beaming with pride over a job well done.Hunter and Edson do not make 'nuts'; they buy nuts ... All commercially available nuts are machined and formed to a specific few thread profiles used by ALL machinists and manufacturers. Asian made items in the past sometimes used the Whitworth System instead of SAE or 'metric' ... so be sure to count the threads per inch. Rx: Find the exact thread diameter, count the number of 'threads per inch', go to a hardware store or industrial supply, etc. Choose bronze or brass so you can get it off, use an anticorrosion compound such as Tef-gel or lanolin on the threads to prevent 'seizing' of the nut to the shaft.
I think you mean British. All the old British Seagulls had Whitworth system fasteners. One reason they are hard to work on nowAsian made items in the past sometimes used the Whitworth System instead of SAE or 'metric' ... so be sure to count the threads per inch.