Threading Tools — Taps, Thread Mills, and Dies

Compiled 2026-04-04 · 50 chunks, 15 posts · tapping · thread-milling · dies · cutting-tools · threading

Summary

Threading tools are the backbone of internal and external thread creation, each with distinct applications and limitations. [[tapping]] remains the fastest method for standard holes but breaks easily in hard materials, while [[thread-milling]] offers flexibility and control at the cost of cycle time. Dies handle external threads but see limited CNC use. Understanding when to choose each tool—and their specific parameters—separates efficient shops from those burning through tooling budgets.

Speeds and Feeds by Tool Type

Taps - Standard Materials

HSS Taps in Steel:

  • 1/4-20: 150-300 RPM, 30-60 IPM
  • 1/2-13: 75-150 RPM, 40-80 IPM
  • M8x1.25: 100-200 RPM, 125-250 mm/min

HSS Taps in [[aluminum-6061]]:

  • 2-3x steel speeds
  • 1/4-20: 400-600 RPM, 80-120 IPM

Cobalt/Carbide Taps in [[304-stainless]]:

  • 50-75% of steel speeds
  • Flood coolant mandatory
  • 1/4-20: 75-150 RPM, rigid tapping only

[[4140-steel]] (30-40 HRC):

  • HSS: 50-100 RPM for sizes above 1/4"
  • Spiral flute recommended for through holes
  • Form taps in softer conditions (<25 HRC)

Thread Mills - All Materials

Solid Carbide - General Formula:

  • SFM = 200-400 (steel), 600-1000 (aluminum)
  • Feed per tooth: 0.001-0.003"
  • Helical interpolation: pitch × RPM = feed rate

Skip Tooth Thread Mills (Premium):

  • SFM = 300-500 (difficult materials)
  • Single pass capability in most steels
  • 2-3x tool life over standard profile

Insert Thread Mills:

  • External: SFM 400-800
  • Internal: SFM 200-400 (clearance limited)
  • Depth of cut: 0.005-0.015" per pass

Tool Selection Guide

Taps by Application

Standard Production Holes (<1/2"):

  • OSG/Emuge Spiral Point (Gun taps): Through holes, steel/aluminum
  • OSG/Emuge Spiral Flute: Blind holes, chip evacuation critical
  • Form Taps: Soft materials (<25 HRC), stronger threads

Difficult Materials:

  • Cobalt HSS: [[304-stainless]], work-hardening alloys
  • Carbide Taps: High-production, rigid machines only
  • Roll/Form Taps: [[aluminum-6061]], soft steels

NPT (Pipe Threads):

  • Calculate engagement: 1/2-NPT = 18.25mm tap drill, 16-20mm depth typical
  • Hand finish after starting in CNC for blind holes
  • Spiral flute mandatory for deep holes

Thread Mills by Size/Application

Micro Threading (0-80 to 1/4-20):

  • Solid carbide single-point: Maximum rigidity
  • Harvey/OSG A-series: Proven performers
  • Emuge skip-tooth: Premium option for difficult cuts

Standard Sizes (1/4" to 1"):

  • Insert mills: Economical for production
  • Kennametal/Carmex inserts: Reliable performance
  • Solid carbide: Better finish, higher speeds

Large Threads (>1"):

  • Thread milling mandatory (taps impractical)
  • Insert tools only economical option
  • Multiple passes required

Manufacturer Cross-Reference

Brand Specialty Price Tier Shop Rating
Emuge Premium taps/thread mills High Excellent
OSG All-around solid performer Medium-High Very Good
Kennametal Insert thread mills Medium Good
Carmex Insert threading Medium Good
Iscar Insert systems Medium Variable
Harvey Solid carbide mills High Excellent
Guhring Specialty applications High Very Good

Common Problems and Solutions

Tap Breakage

Symptoms: Sudden stoppage, broken tap in hole Causes:

  • Wrong tap drill size (most common)
  • Too aggressive feeds in hard material
  • Dull tap (chips welding to flutes)
  • Inadequate coolant

Solutions:

  • Use largest possible tap drill per [[thread-standards]]
  • Add 0.1-0.2mm to standard tap drill in hard materials
  • Chamfer hole entrance 0.5-1mm
  • Rigid tapping with proper synchronization only

Thread Mill Chipping

Symptoms: Poor thread finish, premature wear Causes:

  • Wrong entry method (straight plunge vs. helical)
  • Insufficient clearance in bore
  • Wrong speeds (usually too slow)

Solutions:

  • Always use helical entry (0.1-0.2mm radial arc)
  • Minimum 0.1mm radial clearance on bore
  • Run faster than comfort zone suggests

Thread Tolerance Issues

Problem: Threads too tight/loose consistently Tap Solution: Different tap class (H2, H3, H4) Thread Mill Solution: Compensate final pass diameter ±0.002-0.005"

Shop Floor Tips

Tapping Wisdom

  • "Drill bigger, tap easier" - Use maximum allowable tap drill size
  • Peck depth: 2x thread pitch maximum, 0.5mm retract minimum for chip break
  • Deep holes (>3x diameter): Spiral flute taps, flood coolant, multiple backing cycles
  • Aluminum: Form taps produce stronger threads than cutting taps
  • Stainless: Never peck tap - go straight through or break

Thread Milling Realities

  • Small holes (<0.5"): Often slower than tapping despite claims
  • Large holes (>1"): Only practical option
  • Production insight: "Thread mill anything over 3/8" or in quantities under 100"
  • Skip-tooth mills: Worth premium cost in difficult materials (4-5x tool life)
  • Insert vs. solid: Inserts economical above 0.5" diameter

Tool Life Economics

Real shop experience vs. catalog claims:

  • Standard HSS tap: 200-500 holes (steel), 1000+ (aluminum)
  • Cobalt tap in stainless: 50-100 holes typical
  • Premium thread mill (Emuge skip-tooth): 1500+ holes reported in difficult materials
  • Standard solid carbide thread mill: 200-800 holes depending on material

Material-Specific Notes

  • [[titanium-ti6al4v]]: Thread mill only, carbide, flood coolant, 150-250 SFM
  • [[inconel-718]]: Carbide tools mandatory, expect 10% of steel tool life
  • [[cast-iron]]: HSS taps work well, avoid coolant (chip packing)
  • [[d2-tool-steel]] (>45 HRC): Thread mill only, multiple light passes
  • [[tapping]] — Complete guide to tap selection and parameters
  • [[thread-milling]] — Advanced programming and fixturing techniques
  • [[thread-standards]] — Pitch, tolerance, and specification reference
  • [[4140-steel]] — Threading parameters for this common alloy
  • [[304-stainless]] — Specific challenges and tool selection
  • [[aluminum-6061]] — High-speed threading optimization
  • [[chatter-vibration]] — Troubleshooting threading stability issues
  • [[tool-wear-diagnosis]] — Identifying threading tool failure modes