Tool for deburring threaded rod
Try uniburr. It chucks up in a drill & puts a nice chamfer on the end
|
Tool for deburring threaded rod
wrote in message
... Try uniburr. It chucks up in a drill & puts a nice chamfer on the end Okay. So does that mean I am not allowed to use my bench sander anymore? I use threaded rod for handles all the time. I just cut it to length on the bandsaw, and then I flatten any linear burr with the belt sander, and then spin it against the belt to chamfer the end. Never have any problem threading it into the part, or threading the handles onto the rod. Total working length comes out pretty consistent from one to the next. |
Tool for deburring threaded rod
"Bob La Londe" fired this volley in news:n4cu4e$fko$1
@dont-email.me: Okay. So does that mean I am not allowed to use my bench sander anymore? Chuckle! I don't know why folks don't know that trick. I'll even use a bench grinder to to it (with a gentle touch, wheel moving toward the bitter end). 'Works every time. Lloyd |
Tool for deburring threaded rod
On Thu, 10 Dec 2015 16:47:11 -0600, "Lloyd E. Sponenburgh"
lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote: "Bob La Londe" fired this volley in news:n4cu4e$fko$1 : Okay. So does that mean I am not allowed to use my bench sander anymore? Chuckle! I don't know why folks don't know that trick. I'll even use a bench grinder to to it (with a gentle touch, wheel moving toward the bitter end). 'Works every time. Lloyd My preferece is the bench grinder followed by the brush wheel because that what is available and has wroked for many years. --- Gerry :-)} London,Canada |
Tool for deburring threaded rod
|
Tool for deburring threaded rod
mike fired this volley in news:n4dphv$vu4$1@dont-
email.me: Why do you want to deburr the threaded rod? Use the method that addresses the problem you're trying to fix. If you want nuts to go on easily, try running a nut down the rod. Or a thread restoring die. Or a threading die. Who said we weren't doing that? We're talking about restoring a saw-cut end to a 'clean end'. A file works, too. Unless you're preserving only enough threads on the end of a shortened bolt to fully-engage one nut deep, you _always_ thread a nut or die on before cutting. I guess cosmetics aren't important to you. They are to me. Lloyd |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:18 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter