ozarks
Mechanical
- Jan 30, 2007
- 2
I have a small 304ss part that I must thread (tap) on a production basis. The part is stamped out of .050" thick 304ss with a punched thru extrusion that has sidewalls about .100" high. The I.D. of the extrusion is .284" dia. and it gets tapped with a 5/16-32 UNEF-3B L.H. thread. The .284" dia is textbook for the 5/16-32 UNEF.
Due to the work hardening ability of the 304ss tapping is very difficult and sometimes requires (3) passes with the tap. I am thinking about annealing the stamping prior to tapping in an attempt to reduce surface stresses.
I am presently using spiral flute plug taps. One concern brought to my attention is the possibility the sidewalls of the emboss may be elastically stretching as the tap drives thru and "snapping" back after the tap is removed, thereby not cutting the threads as clean as needed.
Any advice on how to optimize this process would be appreciated.
In the ozarks....
Due to the work hardening ability of the 304ss tapping is very difficult and sometimes requires (3) passes with the tap. I am thinking about annealing the stamping prior to tapping in an attempt to reduce surface stresses.
I am presently using spiral flute plug taps. One concern brought to my attention is the possibility the sidewalls of the emboss may be elastically stretching as the tap drives thru and "snapping" back after the tap is removed, thereby not cutting the threads as clean as needed.
Any advice on how to optimize this process would be appreciated.
In the ozarks....