When it’s okay to screw up your wood
From: Woodcraft Magazine
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THE
KIT: The kit
includes a threadbox for
threading the dowel and a
tap to thread holes for the
threaded dowel. The hard
maple threadbox has a cast
and machined aluminum
guide and a V-shaped
steel cutter held in place
by a brass cutter lock. The
matching tap comes with
a steel T-bar handle that
provides torque while
threading the pilot hole. |
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Anybody who collects antiques
knows of the myriad of applications
that old world woodworkers found
for threaded dowels .... The large,
coarse threads offer remarkable
holding power and an astonishing
degree of torque. And now, with the
Wood Threading Kit—which offers
precision cutters—you can make
short work of cutting both inside
and outside threads, though a few
precautions are in order. |
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THE TEST: Next, I placed the
threadbox on the dowel end, applied
a little downward pressure during the
fi rst turn, and then kept turning in a
clockwise direction as shown in the
above photo. Once you start, do not
back up more than a quarter turn or
you could mess up your threads. If
the cutter is sharp (and ours came
from the factory that way), the whole
operation will go very smoothly.
I achieved
excellent
results on the
very first try. |
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THREADING
SETUP: For external threading, choose
perfectly round and straight grained
hardwood dowels for best
results. I took the threadbox to the
lumberyard to check that the dowels
I bought were a good fi t—not too
loose or tight. Use the hole in the
rectangular hardwood block screwed
to the bottom of the threadbox as a
guide. The dowel should fi t into this
hole without any slop.
Following the instructions, I
sanded a 1/8" chamfer on the dowel
end to be threaded by rotating it
against a belt sander at about 45° as
shown in Photo A. Then I clamped
the dowel vertically in a bench vise
with wooden jaws, and applied a light
coating of linseed oil as a lubricant
during threading. (The oil can be
reduced later on with mineral spirits,
if a different finish will be applied, |
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| THE TAPPING
SETUP: To
make matching internal threads, I
found that the tap is even easier to
use. First drill an appropriately sized
hole (1/8" smaller in diameter than the dowel) in |
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the workpiece as
shown in Photo
B. If drilling
a through
hole, back the
workpiece with |
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TESTER’S TAKE: Though the kit is remarkably
easy to use, the cutter will require sharpening with
extensive use. I found it fun to use contrasting species
such as walnut dowels on maple projects. Two things
to keep in mind when threading dowels are to oil the
threads before screwing the dowel into the hole (or
it will never come out!), and also to thread a long
dowel and then cut it off close to the threadbox, so that you don’t have
to
reverse the cutter along the part that
you want to keep. |
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scrap to avoid tear-out on the bottom face.
THE TEST: Now, secure the workpiece in a wood
vise or elsewhere, slip the T-handle in the tap, and turn
the tap clockwise into the hole as shown in Photo C. It’s
important that the tap is vertical to begin with. Unlike
the threadbox, reverse the cutting motion constantly to
clear chips. A little oil goes a long way here. Bottoming
taps, sold separately, are available for cutting threads all
the way down to the bottom of a blind hole.
BEST APPLICATIONS: The Wood Threading
Kit proves ideal for making antique planes, handscrews,
bar clamps, vises, and veneer presses. In the world
of home furnishings, you’ll see threaded parts used
in adjustable candle and music stands, novelty boxes (having wooden nuts and
bolts), tabletop nutcrackers,
knockdown furniture, and toys. |
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