MickeyDBC
Gold Member
Sounds like you are making enough of these to outsource them to a real machine shop. If you ordered 500+ of them someone could bar pull them, drill, tap, and then tumble deburr these for $1.75 each.
I'd love to have a hand tapping machine like this one at Grizzly, Hand Tapping Machine | Grizzly Industrial
A little late but one of these is handy also. Its actually two pieces with the top being removable.
I'd love to have a hand tapping machine like this one at Grizzly, Hand Tapping Machine | Grizzly Industrial
A little late but one of these is handy also. Its actually two pieces with the top being removable.
Sounds like you are making enough of these to outsource them to a real machine shop. If you ordered 500+ of them someone could bar pull them, drill, tap, and then tumble deburr these for $1.75 each.
The only down side to the B&Sharp is that without a power feed I'm going to be using one hand to turn the tap and the other to put pressure on the tap using the drill press. Depending on how stiff the spring is on the B&Sharp I could use the drill press stop to hold it in place but I would rather not for this application as they are basically just nuts that you have to turn by hand. It's actually pretty time consuming and I would have to do it each time.
I've used those for years when I was a tool & die maker. The spring is not stiff at all. Just stiff enough to hold the tap handle in place. You could push it down with your finger if you want a nice poke... The stop on the drill press should hold it no problem.
Shouldn't be a problem, I use one in my mill.I'm hoping that for speed purposes I can dip the tap in oil and use one had to turn the tap handle and the other hand on the drill press to push down.
They look nice but with my luck the part I would want to tap would be just a fraction of an inch too large to fit on it.
I tried looking for one but couldn't find one. It looks like it's just a variation of the Brown&Sharp tool. One uses the center of the tap handle while the one you pictured uses the outside of the tap handle and the top piece to center it. Does the top part stay attached when using it or is it always loose? The only down side to the B&Sharp is that without a power feed I'm going to be using one hand to turn the tap and the other to put pressure on the tap using the drill press. Depending on how stiff the spring is on the B&Sharp I could use the drill press stop to hold it in place but I would rather not for this application as they are basically just nuts that you have to turn by hand. It's actually pretty time consuming and I would have to do it each time.