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Tap & die sets... which brand??
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Tap & die sets... which brand??
As the post says, which brand tap & dies are the better ones, and which one do I stay away from??
I'm looking at buying something in size around the 110pc set. What price should I be looking to pay for this.
I did have a look at the Kingchrome ones and thought they looked a bit cheap. The die holder didn't look the best quality but I could be wrong.
Cheers.
I'm looking at buying something in size around the 110pc set. What price should I be looking to pay for this.
I did have a look at the Kingchrome ones and thought they looked a bit cheap. The die holder didn't look the best quality but I could be wrong.
Cheers.
When in doubt..... UTE-ERIZE it!!!
God of Magnificant Ideas!
I have a couple of P&N sets....... they'd be over 50 years old
( passed on to me from Dad.... timber boxes !! )
A 135 piece Sutton set thats purely Whitworth ......
( left to me by an lawn mower repairer & family friend in his will )
A 50 piece set of tapered threads n dies from Sidchrome
( repackaged but from whom I dont know )
&
a metric and imperial set from China
( the blue boxed sets )
And I've only broken 1 tap in all the years I've owned em all.....
Yep one from the metric China set !
( my fault it broke.......
)
Cant say I have a preferance over any of them, they all do a good job.

( passed on to me from Dad.... timber boxes !! )
A 135 piece Sutton set thats purely Whitworth ......

( left to me by an lawn mower repairer & family friend in his will )
A 50 piece set of tapered threads n dies from Sidchrome
( repackaged but from whom I dont know )
&
a metric and imperial set from China

( the blue boxed sets )
And I've only broken 1 tap in all the years I've owned em all.....
Yep one from the metric China set !

( my fault it broke.......

Cant say I have a preferance over any of them, they all do a good job.

[color=blue][size=150][b]And your cry-baby, whinyassed opinion would be.....? [/b][/size][/color]
sutton and p&n are sweet. I have tested about 5 sets from china - product samples to kc tools NOT KC TOOLS. all the chinese ones are so marginal, 1 being great in a wooden box. the cheap ones have flights that have massive edges / burrs that tear the threads and are almost useless. look at the taps closely and its pretty obvious.
that said I would never pay retail for a big set, just paying for 80% of sizes that I would never use. better off buying a set of 3 taps in each of the sizes you use in a top brand. benefit too is if they break the "set" is still easy to replace. and with things like the airlocker (1/4 NPT from memory) thread only very few sets have the size anyway.
cheers bru
that said I would never pay retail for a big set, just paying for 80% of sizes that I would never use. better off buying a set of 3 taps in each of the sizes you use in a top brand. benefit too is if they break the "set" is still easy to replace. and with things like the airlocker (1/4 NPT from memory) thread only very few sets have the size anyway.
cheers bru
ADHD Racing would like to thank
Mrs Bru @ Sunshine Coast Developmental Physiotherapy - www.scdphysio.com.au , Ryano @ Fourbys www.generaltire.com.au Blitzkrieg Motorsport
Mrs Bru @ Sunshine Coast Developmental Physiotherapy - www.scdphysio.com.au , Ryano @ Fourbys www.generaltire.com.au Blitzkrieg Motorsport
I have one of the blue cheapie sets that I only used for soft metals and non-critical stuff that I am fabricating. They suck for heavier work.
Then I have a few key sizes that I bought in either Sutton or P&N brands. These are the sizes I use all the time. I have M4, M6, 3/8 UNC and a few others. The difference in steel and manufacturing quality is pretty obvious at a glance.
I got some of them down at a local second hand shop for stuff all! The guy had trays full of them under his counter and I bought the ones I wanted for a couple of bucks each, even in fairly large threads (which tend to be pretty pricey new).
Then I have a few key sizes that I bought in either Sutton or P&N brands. These are the sizes I use all the time. I have M4, M6, 3/8 UNC and a few others. The difference in steel and manufacturing quality is pretty obvious at a glance.
I got some of them down at a local second hand shop for stuff all! The guy had trays full of them under his counter and I bought the ones I wanted for a couple of bucks each, even in fairly large threads (which tend to be pretty pricey new).
This is not legal advice.
P&n, Sutton, Dormer, Yamawa, all come off the top of my head, they will all break if used incorretly doesn't matter what brand, but yeah you certain know the difference when you need to tap a lot of holes in 4140
Chinese cheap stuff is probally only good to use to clear out existing threads that are full of junk/rust/small damage i dont think they would stay that sharp for too long
Chinese cheap stuff is probally only good to use to clear out existing threads that are full of junk/rust/small damage i dont think they would stay that sharp for too long
xxxx wrote:
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P&N are great IME
Used to think sutton were good, but a mate recently bought a new one with chipped/missing threads. Took it back, and about half the sutton taps the same size had defects (chips, double-cut grooves, etc). When he used the one he bought, there were a couple of chipped leading edges after 1-2 holes.
Used to think sutton were good, but a mate recently bought a new one with chipped/missing threads. Took it back, and about half the sutton taps the same size had defects (chips, double-cut grooves, etc). When he used the one he bought, there were a couple of chipped leading edges after 1-2 holes.
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RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
wouldn;t be suprised if they had gone offshore,ISUZUROVER wrote:P&N are great IME
Used to think sutton were good, but a mate recently bought a new one with chipped/missing threads. Took it back, and about half the sutton taps the same size had defects (chips, double-cut grooves, etc). When he used the one he bought, there were a couple of chipped leading edges after 1-2 holes.
sounds like a material defect, or chinaitis lol
xxxx wrote:
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Can't go wrong with snap-on in my opinion. lifetime warranty.. can't complain about that. Many people complain that they are over priced but the way i see it you only have to buy the tool once and if it breaks then you get a free one.
01 td42 GU patrol ute, with extra bits and pieces.
[quote="Bluefreak"][quote="ofr57"]flex is over rated :finger:[/quote]
You drive an IFS too, huh...???
:D[/quote]
[quote="Bluefreak"][quote="ofr57"]flex is over rated :finger:[/quote]
You drive an IFS too, huh...???
:D[/quote]
taps go blunt no matter what brand they are, cant see a cutting tool being replacedTomo_89 wrote:Can't go wrong with snap-on in my opinion. lifetime warranty.. can't complain about that. Many people complain that they are over priced but the way i see it you only have to buy the tool once and if it breaks then you get a free one.
xxxx wrote:
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God of Magnificant Ideas!
I've probably had my 2 sets for about 15 years and to date I've only broken the one tap which was my fault entirely..... that tap is still usable tho, its just a tad shorter now !Ice wrote:Chinese cheap stuff is probally only good to use to clear out existing threads that are full of junk/rust/small damage i dont think they would stay that sharp for too long
None of the taps is showing any real wear and most have done it tough over the years..... the thickest material I've threaded from a bare hole would be through a 2" shaft with the M12 tap !
Like any tool, correct use will see it last a long time
Kingy
[color=blue][size=150][b]And your cry-baby, whinyassed opinion would be.....? [/b][/size][/color]
V8Patrol wrote:I've probably had my 2 sets for about 15 years and to date I've only broken the one tap which was my fault entirely..... that tap is still usable tho, its just a tad shorter now !Ice wrote:Chinese cheap stuff is probally only good to use to clear out existing threads that are full of junk/rust/small damage i dont think they would stay that sharp for too long
None of the taps is showing any real wear and most have done it tough over the years..... the thickest material I've threaded from a bare hole would be through a 2" shaft with the M12 tap !
Like any tool, correct use will see it last a long time
Kingy
Im sure they could be fine for brass or ally or anything soft

my view is of an industrial nature and seeing cnc usage of a tap, when you have a few thousand taped holes to do a few spare taps is quite common
xxxx wrote:
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I use a lot of taps and dies in my trade and brand dosen't matter as long as there made out of high speed steel or HSS DON'T by the alloyed tool steals I find them to be to brital for general barstardisation (and yes that's a word just made it up then
)
and tend to chip teeth, crack or snap whithout warning
Oh well thats my 0.02c for the day and sorry about the spelling jiged most of my english classes

and tend to chip teeth, crack or snap whithout warning

Oh well thats my 0.02c for the day and sorry about the spelling jiged most of my english classes

I'm looking into buying a small tap & die set as well. I haven't used them much in the past and only need them for occasional usage.
Is Total Tools OK to go with, and what are the most common sizes? E.G, I've noticed in the M5 range they have a few different sizes - 0.8, 0.9 and 1.0. What's the go there? I thought M5 has a standard thread?
Is Total Tools OK to go with, and what are the most common sizes? E.G, I've noticed in the M5 range they have a few different sizes - 0.8, 0.9 and 1.0. What's the go there? I thought M5 has a standard thread?
I think M5 x 0.8 is the common size; someone might correct me. But they are all valid metric sizes.TheOtherLeft wrote:I'm looking into buying a small tap & die set as well. I haven't used them much in the past and only need them for occasional usage.
Is Total Tools OK to go with, and what are the most common sizes? E.G, I've noticed in the M5 range they have a few different sizes - 0.8, 0.9 and 1.0. What's the go there? I thought M5 has a standard thread?
This is not legal advice.
Pitches can be anything really, some manufactrers actually use weird ones so only their specifc parts match upTheOtherLeft wrote:I'm looking into buying a small tap & die set as well. I haven't used them much in the past and only need them for occasional usage.
Is Total Tools OK to go with, and what are the most common sizes? E.G, I've noticed in the M5 range they have a few different sizes - 0.8, 0.9 and 1.0. What's the go there? I thought M5 has a standard thread?
.8 is the normal <coarse> pitch for an M5
xxxx wrote:
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dormer would be my pick. When looking for taps check for ISO, International Standards Organisation, these will be all common thread pitches in metric.
Cobolt High Speed Steel tends to last longer, it will be marked on the taps, CoHSS.
Dormer is owned by Sandvik. It was bought around 2 years ago to back up Sandvik Coromant. Coromant do carbide n dormer the HSS.
When looking at the taps make sure they are fully ground, the cheap quality taps will have black or sandblasted sections on them and will not last long, and also cand have hard spots in them making them brittle.
M5x0.8 is the ISO pitch.
I have worked years in CNC machining and toolmaking and have used many brands of cutting tools and found Sandvik coromant and dormer to be the best products.
Cobolt High Speed Steel tends to last longer, it will be marked on the taps, CoHSS.
Dormer is owned by Sandvik. It was bought around 2 years ago to back up Sandvik Coromant. Coromant do carbide n dormer the HSS.
When looking at the taps make sure they are fully ground, the cheap quality taps will have black or sandblasted sections on them and will not last long, and also cand have hard spots in them making them brittle.
M5x0.8 is the ISO pitch.
I have worked years in CNC machining and toolmaking and have used many brands of cutting tools and found Sandvik coromant and dormer to be the best products.
Lots of products come from the same factory, but are made to completely different specs or use different materials.Adam GQ wrote:sutton and p&n come from the same factory
I recently bought a P&N 1/4" BSPT Tap. It was much better quality than the sutton taps in the same size my mate bought.
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RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
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