โMar-22-2016 11:47 AM
โMar-25-2016 05:32 PM
westend wrote:
Tip: To ease the tool into the hole and break up some of the crud in the threads, I use acid, usually phosphoric. The cheapest source of phosphoric I've found is Water Softener Cleaner, green liquid in a bottle. Spray or brush it on the threads prior to mechanical thread chasing.
westend wrote:
RV,
You are getting a pretty extensive video library compiled. You may get to a point to be like Mark Polk. He gets all kinds of sponsorship and free RV components because of his viewership.
Best of luck and keep the vids coming. Good stuff.
โMar-23-2016 08:48 AM
โMar-23-2016 05:06 AM
RVcircus wrote:byronlj wrote:
For cleaning up large pipe threads for which I don't have a tap, I use a steel nipple and cut 3 grooves evenly spaced and parallel with the pipe across the threads. I use a cut off wheel in my portable grinder and only cut thread deep. This gives it a cutting edge and a gap for material to collect. Works just like a tap.
Dave
Interesting, I'll need to give that a try sometime. I've used a nipple to cleanup threads that weren't too bad, but have never seen one turned into a makeshift tap.
โMar-23-2016 04:11 AM
byronlj wrote:
For cleaning up large pipe threads for which I don't have a tap, I use a steel nipple and cut 3 grooves evenly spaced and parallel with the pipe across the threads. I use a cut off wheel in my portable grinder and only cut thread deep. This gives it a cutting edge and a gap for material to collect. Works just like a tap.
Dave
โMar-22-2016 11:57 PM
โMar-22-2016 02:57 PM