Busted tap question
The way you can attack a broken tap depends on several factors.
What size was the tap?
Is it a blind hole or a through hole?
How many flutes on the tap?
Did you drill the recomended size hole or were you trying to cheat with just
a little smaller diameter drill bit?
What kind of metal were you trying to tap?
--
Roger Shoaf
If you are not part of the solution, you are not dissolved in the solvent.
"David Todtman" wrote in message
news:AOg9f.361787$1i.338638@pd7tw2no...
I broke a tap today. There was not enough protruding for me to get a grip
and twist it out. I thought I would anneal the tap in situ and drill it
out. So I heated it red hot with my TIG torch and let it air cool.
When I tried to drill, I found it was still way hard and I abandoned the
idea of drilling out the broken tap. I had the flexability to drill and
tap
beside the original hole so there was really no great loss. But, what if
I
really needed that particular spot?
Would I have had better luck drilling had I cooled the part more slowly
(e.g., buried the part in a bucket of ash)?
Is my thinking nuts or is this a way to get at an offending broken tap?
TIA,
David Todtman
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