Not that it occurred here, I just want to say that there is a tendency to run down Norton, and many other British marks, because of this issue.
It is worth noting that our engine's development finds its roots between the great wars.
Those engineers were actually closer to an earlier era when steam powered the world. They were close in time to those engineers who worked in an era when for the FIRST time questions such as what thread pitches might be, or ought to be. They had to answer questions such as what diameters and pitches would carry what loads and they did it while the science of metallurgy was in its infancy.
I cannot imagine what it must have been like before steam. I cannot imagine non-standard threads and arguments about what the correct thread should be.
To me, it is a pleasure to be able to reach into the engineering past by way of a Whitworth wrench and a BS thread gauge.
That tendency, to denigrate older machines on this point, betrays an arrogant ignorance of those great thinkers who came before.