Everything you need to know about drilling and tapping holes | DIY
Автокөліктер мен көлік құралдары
We’ve all given that small, non-load-bearing bolt just “one last turn,” which results in hours of regret and a mess of stripped-out threads. Well, fear not, we have just the video for you. If you want a quick three-step video on drilling and tapping holes, this ain’t it. In this video, Davin covers everything you need to know when drilling and tapping holes: essential tools, thread types, thread design, thread tolerances, and yes, the step-by-step process of drilling and tapping.
______________________
Contents of this video
0:00 Intro
0:12 Recommended tools
1:33 Design of a bolt
4:29 How to use the tools
6:40 Determining thread size
7:55 Reading a tap and die chart
9:22 What drill bit you need
10:33 Drilling the hole (hand tools)
12:18 Prepping the hole
12:40 How a tap works
13:07 Tapping the hole
15:50 Finished product
16:04 Tapping on a drill press
20:15 Minimal tools needed
#DIY #RedlineRebuild #DavinReckow
Subscribe to our KZread channel for new videos every day! bit.ly/HagertyKZread
Visit our website for daily automotive news, cars stories, reviews, and opinion: www.hagerty.com/media
Stay up to date by signing up for our email newsletters here: www.hagerty.com/media/newslet...
Follow us on social media:
Facebook | / hagerty
Instagram | / hagerty
Twitter | / hagerty
If you love cars, you belong with us. Hagerty Drivers Club is the world’s largest community for automotive enthusiasts. Members enjoy valuable automotive discounts, exclusive events and experiences, roadside service created specifically for collector vehicles, and a subscription to the bimonthly Hagerty Drivers Club magazine. Join Hagerty Drivers Club here: www.hagerty.com/drivers-club
Like what you see? Watch our other series including:
Redline Rebuild | Engine Time-lapse videos from start to finish bit.ly/RedlineRebuild
Barn Find Hunter | Tom Cotter searches the country for abandoned cars bit.ly/BarnFIndHunter
Chip Foose Draws a Car | Reimagining popular cars with new designs bit.ly/HagertyChipFoose
Contact us:
Suggest and feedback - tips@hagerty.com
Press inquiries - press@hagerty.com
Partnership requests - partnerships@hagerty.com
Пікірлер: 353
This no-frills, no gimmicks, no special effects style of video just earned my subscribe. Thanks Hagerty. Looking forward to more legit content.
@mth469
2 жыл бұрын
I believe I heard him say "Boom!" at one point. So there was some special effects.
@ryankim3612
2 жыл бұрын
@@mth469 valid point!
@troycarpenter3675
8 ай бұрын
I hate when they have a long intro and a bunch of nonsense no one wants or needs to hear. Just get on with it!
@howardhughes7427
8 ай бұрын
@@troycarpenter3675 what maybe pointless to you someone else may need or want to hear j/s
Dude... a lot of people know their stuff and make videos on YT showing what they know but "teaching" through good communication is a skill that very few posses. YOU BELONG IN THE CIRCLE SIR !
That's what they need to teach at college , thank you for making this video.
Dang , your good at explaining how to tap. True professional, no gimmicks. You went head on with your explanation , no beating around the bush , straight shooter I meant it in a good way. I give you 3 thumbs up. 👍👍👍!!!
KZread University for the win. Really awesome detailed video. Thank you!
Best video on the subject matter I have found on youtube. Thanks, man. Subscribed.
As I was installing a class 3 Hitch on my Kia Sorento I discovered the four threaded holes in the bottom of the frame rail were bunged up from rust. One trip to Ace hardware to buy a n M10 by 1.25 thread pitch tap, a tap handle and cutting oil saved the day. I followed the instructions this gentleman proposed. In between tapping the individual holes I used brake cleaner to clean off all the shavings on the tap before using it for the next hole. The supplied hardware now has attached my hitch to the frame because of this video and my purchases from Ace hardware. Thank you Hagerty for uploading this informative video.
Thankyou great job now I will feel more confident on my upcoming project
It was one of the most informative and comprehensive crash courses I have ever seen. Covered everything in a few minutes. Thank you, sir 😊
@dirkmcghee1604
18 күн бұрын
A few minutes? That's a Boomer's few minutes if I ever heard one. 🤣
66 yoa; never had a clue how to. Very informative. THANK YOU!
The video explanation is very useful for beginners
Thanks for the guide! I just drilled and tapped my first hole and it felt so good when the bolt went in perfectly. 😆
Got a drill and tap test in the morning for a job ....perfect video .
This man looks Texas. An engineer from Texas is a certified W.
As a HD mechanic I picked up a nice little tip from that video. And that I need that drill index in my kit 😂
Dudes a expert
I use a drill press for tapping whenever I can. My tip is if you have a cheap belt-driven press, pull the belt off, and turn the drill press with the belt pulley above the drill chuck. That way, you can back the tap and feel if the tap is taking too much torque to turn. Don't forget to unplug that drill press before you touch the belt or pulleys. Always,always, always wear goggles or a face shield when tapping. When a tap shatters, it will throw tiny and sharp shards of extremely hard metal. Nice video with great explanations of thread dimensions.
@martysmith6240
Жыл бұрын
Safety first
Thanks. Your tutorial was better than most I ever received at the University
This is awesome. Everything I missed in shop class.
This video was very informative and descriptive, awesome job. I broke my first tap in a wall and had to use a titanium steel bit to drill it out.. man was I sweating
@spaceoddity2485
8 ай бұрын
Every trade guy has done this at some point. After you have been through this ordeal. You focus on getting it right for future times. 👍
Absolutely great lesson! Thank you. The only, only, thing that I would add is that PATIENCE is absolutely required!
Perfect for amateurs like myself: clear, short but detailed, and to the point. I really appreciate the great advice you worked in, too. Many thanks! PS I especially appreciate talking about threads at the beginning. That helps we who want to learn more than just how-to steps. /cheer
Best tutorial and information I have seen on the subject. Thank you so much!!!
Just my two cents on the subject, that I've learned the hard way over the years: - T-handle if you can fit it in is best way to drive the tap for two major reasons: it's easier to see if it goes straight and it's harder to break the tap because you don't apply side force like with ratchet. - It's handy to have some kind of small machinist square to check if you starting straight. Especially for thread that will go deep into the element and you don't have/cannot use drill press with spring loaded tap center. - And as much as power-taping seems appealing because it's fast and almost effortless - sometimes it's the fastest way to spend next two days trying to get broken tap out ;)
@kw2519
3 жыл бұрын
Unless you have an edm in your garage lmao
@autka_me
3 жыл бұрын
@@kw2519 yeah. Those are awesome btw
@kw2519
3 жыл бұрын
@@autka_me I ran one for a little bit at one of first machining jobs lol messy
@dougrobinson8602
3 жыл бұрын
@@kw2519 Damn. You beat me to it! That's the only way to get out a really stuck bottomed tap.
@kw2519
3 жыл бұрын
@@dougrobinson8602 haha Been doin it for a little bit. A chisel and hammer can save you if you’re really careful and have the time. Really careful.
You... You beautiful man. Thank you. My god. You have saved me so much time, heartache, troubleshooting, cussing, embarrassment, etc. Thank you.
Ha! I'm in the lab construction business rather than the car business, and this video was very helpful information! You never know how many ways the content you put on KZread can be useful.
Much respect -thank you for intro in 101 class. Good instructions and instructor.
Unbelievably awesome! Thanks a ton! :)
Thank you so much for sharing all this knowledge; that was a great rundown.
Super, nice/slow explanation. You must have been a High School shop teacher. Mr. Dwyer would be smiling down on you.
When they started explaining more of these tools I immediately subscribed! It was extremely easier for me to understand on campus/job when talking about measurements!
Great video brother! I learned a lot from this. Tapped my first hole today and busted it to pieces.. should have watched first. I didn’t oil it and didn’t do back and forth. Learned from my mistake. Thanks
I've never done this before. Of the 6 or 7 videos I watched, yours was the most complete and interesting to watch. Plenty of explanations as to why it was done a particular way as well as what not to do. Great job. The video and audio quality were perfect, as well.
Excellent presentation, I haven’t done any metalworking since leaving school a few years ago, and I just wanted to refresh how to tap a hole before actually doing it. Great job many thanks.
Excellent! Detailed info well explained. Look no further than this video. Then practice.
I was trying to find a simple tap and die tutorial and got an entire college course on threads and thread creation. I hope youtube is paying you well, professor.
Good instructor
I was very intrigued by your video. Now that got me thinking of how to 'thread' a custom bolt 8mm/6mm reduction. (couldn't find this anywhere, so I think I'll have to make one) from Australia 😀
Extremely valuable content!! If Davin had a TV show, I'd watch it like clockwork twice. Maybe more. Great video!
heres a tip for tightening a drill chuck when the bit spins in the chuck, tighten chuck in all three holes then back to the one u started with
@johnmilner7603
3 жыл бұрын
I always tighten 2 hole and that works for me.
@allogan8152
3 жыл бұрын
Also, don't bottom the bit into the chuck. Put the chuck grips on the end of the drill bit, 1/4" or so. When they heat-treat the bit in the factory they hold by the end so the metal there is left softer and the grips will grip better.
Great video, very well explained, did machine work for a few years, had my share of drilling and tapping, and every now and then you gonna break a tap, live and learn is the best experience.
Thank you! Very thorough and extremely helpful. Seems I've always had a working knowledge of basic tapping concepts and steps, but needed a deeper level of detail for my current challenge. I'll be putting your guidance to work on a BMW differential cover plate bolt hole. Was just checking the torque specs on the cover plate earlier this month and discovered one of the bolts was spinning freely. Turns out at some point in the car's history someone had half-assed a helicoil on the hole in question. So, I'm in the process of conducting a thorough thread repair - properly! 👍🏼
Nicely done. I have a rather large set of drill bits which I've owned for YEARS. It has some drill bits labeled by number or letter, not fractional size, and, until now, I had no idea why they were in the set; nor have I used them. Thanks again.
Thanks Davin
straight to the point.... love these vids
Huge help for me, thanks for the great descriptions and small details to keep in mind
Good stuff. Came here as a beginning designer for firearms parts and found this info applicable. Thanks!
Love the straight forward teaching approach. Well done and I've subscribed.
I'm floored you're drilling into metal without safety glasses. Damn Davin, you're the last person I thought I'd see do that.
I believe you did a great job with your tutorial. I would for everones sake always recommend safety glasses no matter the operation. I served in the Navy and witnessed accidents to the eye that could have been avoided but for the shipmate not wearing googles. Thx
Nice to see even pro can make thread not straight 14:54 but great video. I making threads in drill press just keeping T-handle straight with drill chuck and rotating with hand. Very easy method get straight threads.
Thanks for the information and the clarity.
Your classes are fantastic. Thanks, teacher! 😄👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Hey Hagerty!!! This! This is exactly the type of information I enjoy learning from this channel. The special effects "dancing valve springs" while may be entertaining to some is not very informative. I much rather prefer Davin's monologue while working vs. timelapse and special effects.
Very good presentation. Lots of details and a careful and thorough demo of how to tap. Well done!
Full in depth lecture. Thank you for this video.
Very nicely explained. Thank you.
Great instructional video. Thanks!
Soooo good! Complete course and well explained. This is what I was looking for. Thank you!!!
Super clear. Super thorough. (I’ve also manually rotated my drill press to minimize the speed.). THANK YOU!
amazing teacher!
Excellent what a teacher and easy and clearly explained masterclass 🙂👍
Ahhh ...yes, nothing like that "crunch-snap" sound of your tap breaking in the hole. "Great now what"? LOL nicely done, enjoyed this. Thanks Davin.
I had forgotten about the lettered series of drill bits. Been a long time since I saw them. Great job giving a basic class Davin.
Thank you very much for the video. It is full-blown awesome about tap and dies screws and drill bits. I'm new to this and I have some vintage stuff and that really helped me along. Keep on keeping on with the vids brother they're extremely helpful!!👍
Great how-to! A couple of tips from an ex-machinist: 1) Like Davin says - chamfer your holes, preferably out to just over the major diameter of the thread. This makes for a clean finished look, and prevents sharp threads above the surface which will pull out. 2) In a drill press, instead of center punching, use a "center drill" to start the hole before drilling. This bit will locate the hole, and provide the chamfer in one operation.
@davidrandall271
2 жыл бұрын
This is going to sound grumpy, but it seems there just isn't a lot of knowledge here. Let's be clear...you use a spot drill for pre-drilling, not a centre drill. A centre drill is used for putting a centre in for turning between centres on a lathe, it is bad engineering practice to use a centre drill for a drill. Also these dies here are die nuts, only suitable for reclaiming threads as the rake angle is typically negative. Split dies are used for cutting thread.
@MrTexasDan
2 жыл бұрын
@@davidrandall271 Yes, of course you are correct, it does sound grumpy.
Back to basics. I learned all of this for myself, never gave much thought to having to having to explain it all.
Very informative video for a young machinist like myself! thank you!
On the drill press you can also just turn the chuck by hand. Great video by the way.
@mv4ago
3 жыл бұрын
That's exactly how I do it. Start the tap in the drill press turning the chuck by hand, this keeps the tap perpendicular to the workpiece, then finish off with a hand-held tap wrench either T bar or chuck type. I started tapping holes 47 years ago and I've probably broken about 10 taps in all that time.
@flnthrn2
3 жыл бұрын
And, remove the belt on the drill press to make life easy.
@jamesupton143
3 жыл бұрын
@@flnthrn2 yes. On my drill press all I have to do is back off the belt a little.
absolutely fantastic video. Cool, informative and showed me how to do the whole process. Thank you so much. I’m just working with simple hand tools at home. Envy your machine shop!
Thanks for showing that, good video.
I use a center tool in the chuck and use that to line up the tap in a tap handle and hold it straight. I have never thought to put the tap directly in the chuck of the drill press, but I'm going to have to try your way. :) Also, at most hardware stores you can buy the drill and tap packaged together. "1:00 in the morning, on a Sunday" - Pure gold!
Thanks. This was interesting. I'm building a table out of 8020 aluminum extrusion to put a CNC router on top, so that is why I'm watching this.
Something important to add that I've learned from is to make sure that you drill and tap as straight as possible and you make sure you get the right size drill bit or you might have uneven threads with one side of the hole with very shallow threads or none at all. This is especially important with very fine threads because the drill bit has to be so close to the size of the tap.
So much great value in this video! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks! Very educational.
Very good tutorial, thanks!
Extraordinary detail ! Super helpful !! I learned lots !!! Thanks mate . 👊🏼 🔥
Excellent video, Thank You.
Really great video! Well done.
thank you mate - very nice presentation
Thank you for posting very informative 🙏
Excellent video with a lot of knowledge in it. 👍👍
WE WANT MORE DAVIN !!
Great Video with the close ups.
So useful and helpful. Thank you!
Excellent video. Thanks!
Wow! What a great video. Thanks.
Very nicely explained.
Amazing video. I learned a ton.
Thank you for the best Tapping tutorial on the KZread
@felixf5211
3 жыл бұрын
Seriously?
@KayvanCrafted
3 жыл бұрын
Common don't be a buzzkill...It was good
@felixf5211
3 жыл бұрын
@@KayvanCrafted I was surprised by your comment, as there are some very good thread cutting videos on YT. There's also a multitude of videos like this one, where the host doesn't really know what he's doing. Essentially, this is another dose of digital pollution that obscures relevant content.
@KayvanCrafted
3 жыл бұрын
@@felixf5211 I would be intrested to know some of the good ones, can you mention any channels?
@felixf5211
3 жыл бұрын
@@KayvanCrafted Take a look at abom79. He's a machinist and you can find a good number of applicable videos on his channel. Search it for tapping, as a start.
Thank You. That was great lesson 😊
If you don't wanna lug around a full sized drill press they make portable ones you hook your coordless drill to that way you get the straight holes for $30-50 it's an extremely useful tool for delicate field work
Thank you for the video ... everything I need to know is in it!
Great tutorial, thanks.
Great class! 🙏
Now I have learnt a lot of things! Thanks
Very informative thank you!
One thing I’d like to add is that the best drill bits I’ve ever come across are cobalt drill bits, they cut through metal with ease and rarely break. I use German made HSS Cobalt drill bits but you can buy Irwin ones on line as well or whatever as long as it’s cobalt.
@ronfox5519
8 ай бұрын
True. And get them- at least the smaller diameters -in screw machine length split point. Another great option is sheetmetal bits, particularly as pilot drills or hole starters. The double enders are a better value.
I wish I could have apprenticed under Davin when I was younger.
@wayne9518
3 жыл бұрын
Yeah But Davin was younger then too.
@ThunderbirdRocket
20 күн бұрын
@tunawayFEMwashthat’s great 👍🏼 Super funny ! Needed it !! Thanks .
@ThunderbirdRocket
20 күн бұрын
@@wayne9518 Ha ! Love it ! Thanks 👊🏼