JOE.G
Well-known member
Hi, I have a thread restorer kit but I am looking for a decent well rounded kit. Any ideas? Thanks
Hi, I have a thread restorer kit but I am looking for a decent well rounded kit. Any ideas? Thanks
I made the mistake of buying a cheap set thinking that having the tool and being able to do the work is more valuable than not having it or having a nicer tool in the wrong size.To all the GJ members here who have bought sets a while back, go look at your set and see how many taps and dies that have actually been used out of the set? I'm betting not too many different ones were used (of course there's going to be that GJ member who says he of course uses all of them). Then divide the cost of the set and taps & dies used, I'm betting it ends up not being a better value than buying a tap when needed.
This is why I bought sets too. I have some good 8-32, 1/4-20, 5/16-18, 3/8 16 and 1/2—13 taps, but like indicated above conventional wisdom for me is to buy taps for the job when I know it is coming up. The sets are primarily intended to fill the gap and let me move on with the job that needs to get done, maybe it’s one or two threaded holes on a bracket that needs a fine thread attachment, or a bolt that needs a few extra threads cut. Thats also why I recommended sets with nicer tap and die handles, because separately they can eat up a small budget. While Starrett mentioned above are great, prices starting at $30 tend to be overkill in a just in case type of scenario.My plan was to buy the kit so I would have odd sizes, and then as needed upgrade the most used taps to a better quiality. Taps are not something I need often but I think are good to have on hand. I do have a few sizes in my shop. I do have a nice Lang set of thread restores. I know in the kit there are going to be a lot that I will never use but figured you never do know.
Just because my experience is different than yours doesn’t make it less valid.All these blah blah blah don't buy the set people always come crawling out for these threads. Ignore them, completely.
Buy the set first...when you figure out which ones you always use or wear out, replace those with good singles. You still need the tap wrenches and drive tools. You will still occasionally need that one oddball tap to clean out a thread or cut a single new one that having the set will solve.
We're not all machinists cutting the same new threads every day.
Personally I have the biggest gearwrench set, it's been perfectly fine for years.
So maybe I should ignore you for your bad advise (IMHO).All these blah blah blah don't buy the set people always come crawling out for these threads. Ignore them, completely.
Buy the set first...when you figure out which ones you always use or wear out, replace those with good singles. You still need the tap wrenches and drive tools. You will still occasionally need that one oddball tap to clean out a thread or cut a single new one that having the set will solve.
We're not all machinists cutting the same new threads every day.
Personally I have the biggest gearwrench set, it's been perfectly fine for years.
Just because my experience is different than yours doesn’t make it less valid.
I don’t appreciate you telling folks to “completely ignore” posts that you don’t agree with.
At the end of the day I don’t give a **** how people spend their money. They asked for our opinions, yours and mine. I gave my honest opinion.
My experience is that generic tap and die sets are a massive rip off and waste of money and inevitable time spent removing broken taps. Cheap taps break easily and end up costing way more time and money than I’d you just spent an extra couple bucks and bought the good stuff in the first place.
Good taps are not that expensive. This is one of those times where it’s absolutely worth the extra 20% or so to get professional tools.
I run a machine shop, so obviously I need good taps. How does my experience disqualify me from making recommendations? If I was in the OP’s shoes, I’d rather take the opinion of the guy who taps a lot of holes on what taps to buy than the weekend warrior who’s just had hood luck with their box store set that they use once every six months.
I’m glad your GW set has worked for you, but please don’t say to ignore posts from people with experience contrary to yours.
So maybe I should ignore you for your bad advise (IMHO).
The drive tools in those kits ****, period. As I have stated, buy the Starrett tap handles once and you will realize what a good tool it is, even if used periodically.
Oh, and I'm not a machinist. Never said I was nor do I plan to go into that field or line of work, but I know what works best and it isn't those kits.
You're both more than welcome to ignore me, as long as the OP doesn't.
Buying singles only make sense when you know what sizes you need and are working with them daily. For 99% of people who use a tap to chase a hole once and a while or re-tap a stripped hole to a new size, the sets will work just fine. Most broken taps are from people forcing them, not cleaning chips, and not keeping them square, doesn't matter if it's an expensive tap or one out of a set, you'll break them just the same.
We're not talking 20% more here or anything either, a Starrett tap handle alone goes for $75-125, enough to pay for half of a decent set. A single Irwin tap (let alone some of the other brands) are $10-20/each. Nobody is going to put together a full set of singles, it would be $1000+ and nothing ***** more than needing a tap you don't have on hand at 6pm on a Saturday. Having the set means you are prepared, have a good variety, and then can add on higher quality singles (AS I SAID) when they discover their commonly used ones.
Running a machine shop disqualifies you from making reasonable recommendations to the common DIYer or mechanic or hobbiest or maintenance guy....you can only see things the way you use them. If someone needed recommendations on the best tap for daily machine shop use, then please step right up.
Wrong, wrong, wrong. Starrett tap handle $75-125? Where? The Starrett website site list price for them is half of what you are saying and even cheaper yet on amazon or if even cheaper if you use a coupon and go onto Zoro's website. E-bay is another great resource to buy a tap handle that actually works really well (unlike those in the kits). And the die handles are about fifteen bucks on McMaster's website.
Do you understand anything about taps? Why I ask? Because a starter tap (or taper tap) is used to prevent broken taps by getting the hole's threads to be perpendicular to the hole. This ensures the tapped threads are square and straight into the hole, unlike your plug tap which is very easy to start crooked and then snap off inside the hole.
How and where are you buying all your stuff for a grand? Are you really that ignorant or are you just anyother keyboard commando that doesn't know jack? I guess you have never heard of McMaster Carr or MSC before? Try going their websites and actually see what stuff for before spewing bad information about prices.
I don't own or work in a machine shop and still recommend buying single taps because you should strive to use the best possible tool to do the job the safest and smartest way. And yes; I own, I use and I will always recommend a 2 at minimum or 3 tap (best case) set.
Joe.G: I would also recommend getting tapping fluid as well. A 16 ounce bottle of Tap Magic will last you a long time and help prolong the life of your thread cutting tools.

It's pretty clear you don't actually know what you're talking about, and will continue to spread false information or at the very least misleading information. You're representing the extremes, not the typical use cases.Angry much? No need to call me names.
Top results on Amazon.com searching "Starrett Tap Handle", so maybe I should have said $51.62 to $165.87 to be more accurate....
The grand comment is if you tried to buy all the pieces of a regular set in singles...average 100 piece tap and die set, $10/piece on average = $1000. Makes no sense buying singles to have on hand all the variety a regular joe would want. 99% of people using taps at home are not making new holes, they're chasing stuff or fixing stuff and don't know the sizes they'll need in advance. I sure as hell don't want to have to order and wait a couple days to get the single tap because I ran into a size I don't have when repairing a lawn mower or something.
You sound like the guy who would say only Snap-On tools work and anything else is a waste of money. Might as well just buy sockets in singles too right? No point in getting any socket set since they're all **** unless you buy them the most expensive way possible and if you don't do that, they will all break and not turn the bolt.
It's pretty clear you don't actually know what you're talking about, and will continue to spread false information or at the very least misleading information. You're representing the extremes, not the typical use cases.
The starrett handles you have linked are the top of the line, and represent the highest quality available. They are also NOT what we are saying you should buy as a single. The $165 dollar handle will take up to a 3/4" tap. That ain't going to be in a set. Buy whatever handle you like, they all work pretty much the same. It is the TAP that matters. Sure, the starrett ones are smooth, well made, and heirloom quality. But it still just drives a square end.
Taps are not intended to be used as thread chasers. They are meant to cut new holes. If you're just using them as thread chasers, you aren't comparing apples to apples. If you are using your cheap taps as thread chasers, they probably will last quite a while, because they're not actually doing much. If you use taps to actually thread holes, you will quickly notice the difference. I'd rather have taps that cut threads repeatedly and reliably, as well as cleanup the occasional damaged thread.
You want the convenience of a set. You want the fancy box with all the labeled holes and pockets that you can pull out of your toolbox and have all the sizes. That's easy to get. You take the tap chart, go into the industrial supply and buy one of each size listed that corresponds to what you work on. Put them in a drawer. Done. I have not now, nor have I ever recommended buying a tap onesey twosey as needed. Just go buy one or two in each common size and build your set.
Why wait a few days? Mcmaster has overnight shipping, and most industrial supply houses have counter sales. I can buy most any size tap over the counter locally from a good industrial brand 6 days a week.
If you actually use taps to thread holes, get good ones. If you want a set to give you warm fuzzies for "just in case" go ahead and get a set.
It is pretty telling that anyone who actually uses taps and other machining cutters does not recommend the cheap sets. We've been there, learned that lesson the hard way. My shop removes broken taps from parts that auto mechanics bring in pretty frequently. "hey its a snap-on tap, I'll just get a warranty replacement". Yeah, but you spent $100 on my shop rate getting the broken one out of the head or whatever. Same with drills, end mills, lathe toolbits, carbide inserts, and so on and so forth.
The opportunity cost of removing a broken tap outweighs the difference in tap cost every time. Downtime, machine shop costs, and the added hassle of having to buy another tap to replace the broken one are all way more expensive than just buying a freaking $10 or $15 dollar good tap.
To the OP,
If you really want a set, they do actually sell some sets in quality HSS tooling. You pay for the extra bits and bobs you don't need, but it all comes in a set. Norseman CTD makes a good one.
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I keep these sets in my service van. Handy because they have the drills too.
HSS Drill & Tap Sets | Norseman Drill & Tool
Norseman Drill & Tool - Includes corresponding drill with tap in a durable metal case all manufactured in the USA.www.norsemandrill.com
Good grief.
Do you honestly think the op is asking about tapping dozens of new holes every day? Again, 99% of people on this forum use their taps once or twice a month for one or two holes at most. I also said a couple times now, buy singles once you know what you need for specific uses. If he's going to go and tap dozens of 3/8-16's then sure, order a single in advance. Otherwise, get the set to start.
This statement:
"It's pretty clear you don't actually know what you're talking about, and will continue to spread false information or at the very least misleading information. You're representing the extremes, not the typical use cases."
Right back at you.