Duh, I can't believe I missed that. Yeah, that's tricky.
Troy
-----Original Message-----
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Monroe L. King Jr.
Sent: Wednesday, 5 August 2015 11:47 AM
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Re: Tapping holes in SS 316
He said 40 tpi which is pretty tough, also if you have any "White Lead"
I use that (and it's probably 40 years old)on the super tough jobs mixed
with paraffin and talo.
-------- Original Message --------necessary precautions you should be ok. What size thread is it?
Subject: [AR] Re: Tapping holes in SS 316
From: "Troy Prideaux" <GEORDI@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Tue, August 04, 2015 6:32 pm
To: <arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
We only use HSS for tapping our stainless so providing you take the
On Behalf Of Robert Watzlavick
Troy
_____
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Wednesday, 5 August 2015 11:22 AMgrease for the car. Not sure if that is the same thing or not.
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Re: Tapping holes in SS 316
I had seen the suggestion about Moly D - I think I have some Moly D
for this so I could go with 50% thread (0.096 vs. 0.089 drilled hole).
The larger hole is a good idea - I don't need any strength to speak of
was planning on using are brand new so maybe I can get away with it.
I found a bar of 316 in my scrap bin so I'll test it out. The HSS taps I
wrote:
-Bob
On 08/04/2015 07:14 PM, Michael Clive wrote:
Titianium taps, Moly D lube. (Molybdenum disulfide)
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 5:06 PM, Troy Prideaux <GEORDI@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
316 isn't necessarily harder than 304 - I've often seen 304 grades thatare harder than 316 grades and vise versa so if you can tap into 304, the
chances are you can tap into 316.
If the valve body is a casting, the chances are it's actually not 316but a close variant with similar properties that can be identified as 316,
but could be a harder material than your true 316 stock material.
wider than normal to avoid tool breakage. When hand tapping, I'll rotate
Tapping stainless in general: I generally drill the initial bore out
the tap a revolution or so and then reverse half a rev or so to remove some
of the frictional stress on the tap and follow that process all the way to
completion. Use a good grade of tapping grease if possible or at least
cutting grease. Make sure your tap is aligned straight with the hole -
preferably start the tapping process in the same drill press position as
the drilling process if you used a drill press or fixed machine to drill
the hole.
If machine tapping - tool life can be increased significantly byfollowing the suggested speeds and feeds that are practically difficult to
achieve by hand tapping.
by hand.
Tapping small fine threads in hard stainless materials is hard especially
On
Troy
-----Original Message-----
From: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Behalf Of Robert Watzlavick
Sent: Wednesday, 5 August 2015 9:48 AM
To: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [AR] Tapping holes in SS 316
I need to tap some #4-40 holes in an SS 316 valve body (Swagelok
SS-4P4T) for a bracket. I'd really like to avoid breaking the tap so
any tips? I usually use SS 304 and aluminum so I haven't worked much
with the harder stainless steels. The tap is HSS and I was just going
to use Tap Magic for the cutting fluid. If I have to, I can drill all
the way through the body and put a nut on the other side but I'd rather
use a threaded hole.
-Bob