JerrySharrett
Senile Member
Jay, I didn't read all of this post because if you don't occasionally indent and double space the words run together (I have an unusual eye condition that requires a different concentration than most people depend on).Ya know, I've been lookin at them threads thinkin the same thing. I gotta tell ya, just last year I was trying to cut some threads and I just couldn't get them to come out right. I used a tool that Grizzly sells and I set my compound at 29 and a half degrees and went to cutten threads,IThanks...Jay Cutright
That said, why set the compound at 29.5 degrees for a standard 60 degree Vee thread? If a threading tool was ground with a "dish" on top to where there was a positive clearance all around there would be no reason to use the 29.5 degree setting. You could just feed straight in or feed in at 15 degrees or whatever as long as you stayed within that 60 degree envelope.
Since most threading inserts and hand ground tools do not have a positive top clearance all around, using 29.5 degrees works best. Why? Think about it, the 29.5 degree setting creates a "back drag" of 0.5 degrees. This back drag allows the back face of the Vee tool to burnish that face of the Vee. And where is the normal load on that thread is tightened? On that thread face.
Edit-there is also the issue of keeping the half-nut loaded in the same direction for each pass. The 29.5 setting helps with that but without getting deeper in the mechanics of machining, just set the compound on 29.5 degrees counter clockwise from a ZERO being perpendicular to the workpiece being threaded...trust me!!!
Last edited: