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Thread: BA taps
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22nd September 2011, 12:34 PM #1
BA taps
hello
I picked these up at a hamfest ..the guy had quite a lot of them at a giveaway price
I think they are mostly carbon steel so maybe only useable for softish metals-brass and aluminium ? He had #2 to 10 .... did I do well chaps ?
Mike
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22nd September 2011, 12:55 PM #2GOLD MEMBER
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BA Taps
Mike
You did very well.
Very handy, thread taps in BA thread form.
Nothing wrong with carbon steel taps, treated carefully they will last for years, & yes they will tap steel very well. I have a set & have tapped heaps of all metals including steel, with no problems. The main thing to remember is to use the correct size tapping drill & cutting oil like "Tap Magic" or equivalent.Everyone has their favourite oil.
The Pratt & Whitney taps you got hold of are a collectable piece of history.
Enjoy your tapping!
regards
Bruce
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22nd September 2011, 02:46 PM #3GOLD MEMBER
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That's an awesome pick up.
I concur about carbon steel. Nothing wrong with it. I think HSS became popular because of it's longevity in production work many years ago. Now they have TCT tools. For the home use and treated well, will be a good investment.
That's my uneducated opinion past onto me from my father who did his fitting & turning apprenticeship with AEG in germany just after the war....
He also showed me the grinder test to distinguish between carbon and HS steel.
Amazing the stuff you remember from your parents..
RIP Dad.
Simon
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22nd September 2011, 03:38 PM #4
Good
Righto .....Yes, I guess I was just fortunate for once .
I had an old Land Rover that used #3 BA tapped holes around the main windscreen frame to fix the outer frame ... what pain it was ... that car had many of those oddities come to think of it. I've been told or read somewhere , the even sizes are the norm in industry 2 4 6 etc ... I've seen many BA screws on older electronic gear as well .. valve radios etc. We can thank the Pomms for it.
Mike
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22nd September 2011, 07:15 PM #5Senior Member
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Quite a good deal there. I believe carbon steel are harder than HSS but HSS is tougher and lasts longer,more wear resistant. Sounds a bit strange but I read it somewhere. I haven't confirmed it.
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22nd September 2011, 10:35 PM #6GOLD MEMBER
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22nd September 2011, 11:58 PM #7
BA screws
BTW if anyone needs BA screws. Classic fasteners in Adelaide usually has a good range of them. MIKE
Classic Fasteners - Fasteners for your vehicle restoration project.
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23rd September 2011, 07:38 AM #8Senior Member
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BA was a scientifically engineered threading system see here:
British Association screw threads - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
I suspect the 47.5deg form was for non interchangability between it and the other systems.
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23rd September 2011, 03:36 PM #9GOLD MEMBER
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Is a thread that measure 3.05mm Dia and 5.3mm over 9 pitchs going to be anything other that 5BA?
Stuart
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23rd September 2011, 05:16 PM #10Senior Member
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