Dangers of breaking taps *GRAPHIC IMAGES*

samedi 7 novembre 2015

Hi Guys,
I've been a little quiet of late but i think this one is one of those eye openers i had to share.

I've been working from home part time (4 days a week) for over a year now, mostly on knifemakers tools and equipment.
For all my tapping i use a piper tapping chuck in the Hercus camelback, it is a great paring.

I try to avoid blind holes due to the risks of bottoming out the tap, and when i do i try to leave a decent amount of clearance. There are times however it cannot be avoided.

On Wednesday i was tapping M6, and i had to get as much thread as i could in the holes (about 150 of them, so hand tapping was not a really viable option) as i only had 12mm of material thickness.

Despite drilling them in the mill one hole must have been shallow, and inevitably the tap (spiral flute HSS-E Dormer) bottomed out and "exploded".

A piece hit me on the inside of the elbow, and i heard a few hitting things behind me. Ouch, get over it, move on!

Fast forward to today with a nice yellow bruise and hard lump. Surely there is not a bit in there?

A test with an N50 neodymium magnet soon proved me wrong. Pictures show the rest!

I tend to be a bit lax some days with my safety glasses. It's only drilling and tapping right, what could happen? Not any more!

Cheers,
Ew
Attached Images




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Dangers of breaking taps *GRAPHIC IMAGES*

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