Other questions:
What should be the turning speed of the tap?
Any general pointers on tapping?
You may respond to him by email at
mark_j...@spantech.glasgow-ky.com
or to me and I will forward. Postings to the newsgroup will also be
forwarded.
Thanks.
Joel Lenoir, P.E. joel....@wku.edu
Western Kentucky University
Less coolant compatible and messier is Molly-dee tapping oil. It may be more
effective if he still has problems in stainless.
Also, a tapered reamer gives better tap life, cleaner threads.
Tapping speed accourding to my chart, 25/35 sfm.
Ken
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RPM = 10*Pitch
FeedRate = 10 IPM
From your description of the problem it sounds as if the spindle rotation is
not syncronized with the Z axis drive. Time to call the service tech. You
can Tach it out yourself but most of the time it isn't worth the trouble.
Joel Lenoir wrote in message <34DF2B31...@wku.edu>...
1) Drill your tap drill 1/64" to 1/32 oversize or better yet, use a pipe
reamer first.
2) Use a high pressure lube, somthing you might use in a dead center or on
a steady rest.
3) 25 - 50 RPM should work.
4) Don't you dare use soluble oil
5) Pray real hard and look out for flying pipe taps.
Stainless is generally Very gummy material. If you look at it sideways, it
will gall and strip your threads right out.
That gives the appearance of an "excessive number " of threads. I have
allways been leary of ridgid tapping, becuase of the accelerating and
decelerating issue, but I won't argue the point. ( Don't ya have a nice
Tapmatic or a spring loaded holder ?)
Lotsa luck, Homey.
What about generating the thread? Wouldn't that solve the problem?
-Mike
Elliott wrote in message ...
Tim Jenkins wrote in message <35018...@news.cyberzone.net>...
snip
> I put a .5 sec dwell at the bottom of a Z-.425 4-40 into 6061 and taps
kept
>snapping like sap in a fresh cut pine log in a hot fire. I had to kick it
up
>to a second and a quarter to get the breakage down to about one every day.
> A floating holder in a less tight CNC from Hurco tapped the same job for
>several days before it would break.
> Ain't progress grand....
I do a job with a similar thread - 4-40 x .5"deep in 6061 and I use a
rollform tap , I get several thousand holes out of a tap - with the rollform
there is no "stuff" to jam in the hole.
the machine I use is a Mighty Comet with Mitsubishi Meldas control , and
I've had no problems rigid tapping from 2-56 in 6161 to 3/4 pipe in brass
Steve C
A Better Mousetrap!
Burlingame CA
(650)344-5157
Good luck
J.B.
Tim Jenkins wrote in message <35018...@news.cyberzone.net>...
> We have a Lambda control on our new Hitachi VM 40III - fancy as it's
>supposed to be, the techies in the NY orifice said I should use the P
>parameter to put a dwell at the bottom of the z movement. I began to argue
>that this negates the money I gave them for a ridged tap feature - but that
>will be a conversation for my sales guy.
> I put a .5 sec dwell at the bottom of a Z-.425 4-40 into 6061 and taps
kept
>snapping like sap in a fresh cut pine log in a hot fire. I had to kick it
up
>to a second and a quarter to get the breakage down to about one every day.
> A floating holder in a less tight CNC from Hurco tapped the same job for
>several days before it would break.
> Ain't progress grand....
>
Make it easy! Just divide the RPM by the threads per inch.
200/20 = 10
>I have rigid tapping on bridgeport Discovery 308, The calculation I
>use is ( 1.0 divided by number of threads per inch on tap being used,
>then multiply by RPM of spindle will give you your z axis feed rate.
>
> Example-> (1.0 / 20 tpi x 200rpm = 10.0 feed rate)
>
Wes wrote in message <350528bb...@news.inficad.com>...
>On Sun, 08 Mar 1998 19:27:27 GMT, Haw...@home.com (HawkEye) wrote:
>
>Make it easy! Just divide the RPM by the threads per inch.
>200/20 = 10
Make it even easier - go to http://www.microsystemsgeogia.com and get a
copy of my The Machinist's Mate , there is a function to do just this , sub
section of tapdrills , both inch and mm.
Steve C
A Better Mousetrap!
Burlingame CA
(650)344-5157
>
It sounds to me more like incorrect gain settings in the parameters.
If you can try running in a higher gear range at the same speed/feed.
Phrede
HawkEye wrote in message <6durjj$9...@bgtnsc03.worldnet.att.net>...
>I have rigid tapping on bridgeport Discovery 308, The calculation I
>use is ( 1.0 divided by number of threads per inch on tap being used,
>then multiply by RPM of spindle will give you your z axis feed rate.
>
> Example-> (1.0 / 20 tpi x 200rpm = 10.0 feed rate)
>
>
>
>On Sat, 7 Mar 1998 16:29:32 -0800, "Steve" <sca...@aimnet.com> wrote:
>
>>
>>Tim Jenkins wrote in message <35018...@news.cyberzone.net>...
>> snip
>>> I put a .5 sec dwell at the bottom of a Z-.425 4-40 into 6061 and taps
>>kept
>>>snapping like sap in a fresh cut pine log in a hot fire. I had to kick it
>>up
>>>to a second and a quarter to get the breakage down to about one every
day.
>>> A floating holder in a less tight CNC from Hurco tapped the same job for
>>>several days before it would break.
>>> Ain't progress grand....
>>
>> I do a job with a similar thread - 4-40 x .5"deep in 6061 and I use a
>>rollform tap , I get several thousand holes out of a tap - with the
rollform
>>there is no "stuff" to jam in the hole.
>> the machine I use is a Mighty Comet with Mitsubishi Meldas control , and
>>I've had no problems rigid tapping from 2-56 in 6161 to 3/4 pipe in brass
>>
The feedrate calculator software supports
tapping in various materials. Address is: