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Tap And Dies


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Here is a little query that is probably painfully obvious to those in the know but puzzles a tinkerer like me.

 

Got myself a little Anchor Tap and Dies set and although I have used the taps for re threading holes I have not had cause to put a thread on a bit of wire or create a screw if you like.  Can anyone educate me in simple terms on the use of the plate and in particular what the arrowed doubled holes are for.

 

post-197-0-50297300-1437905200_thumb.jpg

 

 

Are they the actual cutting holes and the single hole opposite the one to check the thread in, I can't see how the double hole is utilised.

 

Cheers,

 

Vic

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Are they the actual cutting holes and the single hole opposite the one to check the thread in, I can't see how the double hole is utilised.

Cheers,

Vic

You're absolutely correct Vic, the split forms the cutting edge.

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Is this one of those Indian made sets? Are those any good? I've used cheaply made (Indian or Chinese) three-flute small taps before, and they were horrible.

The Indian ones I've seen for sale are too cheap to be decent, I suspect..

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I agree with George,

 

I think mine just cost in the region of £14.95, Red rooster sell the same set boxed up for a bit more (£18.95). 

 

I got them as I needed one size to do one job and that was only resizing a stripped out hole on.  It worked ok but I was extremely careful and they now reside in the back of my tool box awaiting the next emergency. 

 

As I just tinker I am not likely to use them often, if you are expecting to be using them often, I would probably buy a better set - those do however come at a premium but like everything else you have to balance things out - you can buy a decent Omega for the same price as a Bergeon set !.

 

Cheers,

 

Vic

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Hi Vich,

 

the other thing the hole is useful for is inserting the blade of a jewellers saw through when you shear of the wire you are trying to thread :-)

 

The most successful technique I've found is to hold the wire in a collet in the watchmakers lathe (put a good chamfer on the end), hold the die plate at 90 degrees to the wire using a tailstock tube to support it.

 

Lubricate the wire with a light oil or cutting fluid

 

turn the headstock by hand whilst putting pressure on the tailstock and die plate,

 

only turn the headstock spindle a quarter turn, back off a half turn, repeat

 

Once you have cut about two whole turns, back the die plate off the wire altogether, clean out the die

 

thread back on and carry on cutting.

 

 

I started out with brass wire (trying to make a banking pin for a cheap pocket watch) and snapped the wire off in the die more times than I care to admit, with these cheap die plates it trial and error and practice, practise, practise. The main problems I found with the finished result were the thread form was poor and as the die plate has a chamfered lead-in on both sides and so forming a thread up to a shoulder is not possible. I expected the plate to have a chamfer on one side and be flat on the other side, but all the ones I have (you end up buying another whole set when you snap the tap off trying to clean out the die) are chamfered both sides :-)

 

good luck

 

Sean

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I know GEO, I know :) but it was the only way I had at the time to get the mangled bits of brass out of the plate. After much practise I learned to saw through the wire 3/4s of the way, then use a screwdriver to unscrew the sheared wire.

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can you remove some metal off one side to remove the chamferred cutting portion?

Anil

It should be possible, but you would require access to a surface grinder to do it accurately.
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I wonder if a small end mill would give a good enough surface on the plate?

The plate will be too hard to cut with an endmill unless you draw the temper out and re-temper the plate afterwards. I really think the only practical option is to have it surface ground. Another good thing about surface grinding, the plate will be held perfectly flat on a magnetic chuck. You will have to de-magnetise the die plate afterwards.

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