Originally posted by Thoriated Tungsten
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I think you'd have just as much difficulty finding a proper thread to fit a British or Canadian product from that era. The Allies had a lot of headaches related to lack of interchangeability of parts during WW2 because there were different screw thread standards in place in the USA, Canada and the UK. This was addressed in 1949 with the adoption of the Unified Thread Standard.
I think the take home lesson is that it's easiest to find parts for old radios in countries where they originated and where supply lines existed because they were widely used. During the WW2 era Denmark was either a Nazi protectorate or a Nazi occupied territory. If Denmark, Germany and Europe in general had all adopted the same metric thread standard, then an M3 screw replacement is no big deal. A Motorola radio, on the other hand, is a foreign object built to another set of standards, and it's reasonable to expect that you might have trouble finding ASME/SAE standard parts where you live. But where I live they're very easy to find, and most people that work on old radio gear around here either have these fasteners on-hand in their bins or they have ready access to them. When the Unified Thread Standard was adopted in 1949 it eliminated the 0000 through 000 sizes, but there are still lots of those parts available in their country of origin.
As you might expect, I have a hard time finding the tiny Japanese metric screws for repairing Nikon gear. I'm sure that they're easy to find in Japan.
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