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Tap and die storage ideas

NBN

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Jun 6, 2008
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190
Location
SE Tejas
I've recently inherited a large number of taps and dies, approximately 200 at a quick glance.
For the absolute most common sizes, 2 pieces of 1/2" plate had been cut approximately 1.5"x10" and threaded holes fabricated to hold the taps and bolts inserted to hold the dies for storage. What is an easy way to store the remainder of the taps and dies that make it quick and easy to identify without having to dig through plastic baggies and boxes as is the case now?
 
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e015475

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Joined
Jul 24, 2012
Messages
644
Location
Show Low and Mesa Arizona
I inherited a set of Greenlee taps and dies from my father in law. Had a nice wooden box with all the taps and dies routed out. Unfortunately it was left in a moist garden shed and the box warped to the point it was unusable. I threw them in a tool box drawer 20 years ago and have accumulated other cats-and-dogs as the years went by.

Last week I dumped them out on the kitchen island and laid them out on my healing pad to see what I had and how I could make them more usable. The green tape border is the size of an available tool box drawer.

Taps and Dies.jpg
I'm going to make a foam drawer organizer from the pads available at HF. Laying it out with 1" tape to make sure it all fits with adequate margins.
Tap and Die Layout on foam.jpg
For the dies, a piece of thin-wall tube the same diameter as the thread dies works, and sharpened on the belt sander, cuts the foam perfectly smooth and round. For the taps, I'm going to route out a tray in the foam using a grinding stone on a pin router. Made a few samples and it seems to make a very nice pocket.
Pin Router.jpg
Might be more of a 'science project' than you were looking for. You can just buy a Huot box and be done with it, but I wanted my handles, taps and dies all in one place. Too cold to work in the garage this time of year.
 
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Bucko

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Aug 23, 2021
Messages
679
I use these for my spare drill bits. They give you a set if blank labels with it if you want to organize it differently. Currently one used for $50.43.

VEVOR Tap Dispenser Cabinet, Three-Drawer Tap Dispenser, Tap Organizer Cabinet Cold Rolled Steel, 60-Compartment Tap Dispenser and Organizer Cabinet Holder for Metric Size 3-24 mm/0.12-0.94 inch https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0997VTQJR/?tag=atomicindus08-20
 

e015475

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Joined
Jul 24, 2012
Messages
644
Location
Show Low and Mesa Arizona
We had that style of dispenser in the tool crib at work, and I really thought that was a very nice way to keep letter/number/fractional bits and taps and dies. With a lot of space, it'd be my preferred approach.

Ultimately though, I decided that I didn't want to give up any more counter space for the dispensers, but some real estate was available in a tool box drawer. This is about $30 of Shaller boxes with drill bits in them - they are all fractional and the letter/numbers are in indexes in drawers lower in the cabinet since I don't use them often. I considered doing something like this, except with taps and dies-
Shaller Boxes Drill Bits.jpgShaller has a simple to use CAD program to lay out drawers with their boxes on their website.
 

nadogail

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Jan 23, 2009
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32,049
Location
Coronado, CA
Taps and their associated drill bits go into an index. NF, NC or Metric. I bought them from MSC about 25 years ago. The very few dies I have go into a small pasteboard box that has been well oiled.
 
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WisJim

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Dec 20, 2010
Messages
2,302
Location
Menomonie, WI
I bought a large quantity of new taps and dies at a garage sale years ago and have them in a small drawer cabinet that I picked up cheap. Actually 3 of these cabinets with 40 drawers each for taps, dies, and milling cutters from the sale.
 

nbpt100

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Joined
Oct 19, 2016
Messages
2,302
Location
Massachusetts
I have a hard plastic case they came in. My extras are in two bags sorted by metric and SAE. I can find one fast and when it wears out I go to the plastic bag and find a replacement.. Is that the best way. No. but it works for me for now.

I have though of drilling appropriate holes in a 2x3 and stick the taps in cutting edge up. Another 2x3 with nails for the dies. Never got around to it.

Some great ideas here.
 

VoodooCLD

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Joined
Sep 12, 2014
Messages
415
Here's mine, it's a harbor freight 26" lower cabinet that I outfitted with dividers. The dividers are Huot 14030 that I cut with a miter saw. I used aluminum angle for the spacers. Works very nice to organize a lot of smaller taps. The individual LISTA trays are too large when you only have 1 or 2 of a certain tap size.
9E415A10-7AFC-4CF9-B4A7-1F4FEF630D28.jpeg
 

LWB

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Oct 6, 2019
Messages
1,259
Location
ON, Canada
Here's mine, it's a harbor freight 26" lower cabinet that I outfitted with dividers. The dividers are Huot 14030 that I cut with a miter saw. I used aluminum angle for the spacers. Works very nice to organize a lot of smaller taps. The individual LISTA trays are too large when you only have 1 or 2 of a certain tap size.
9E415A10-7AFC-4CF9-B4A7-1F4FEF630D28.jpeg

Did you cut them in half? How many master sets did it take to outfit your drawer? Two?
 

cannuck

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Joined
Nov 30, 2021
Messages
4,658
Location
Rural SK
I put my cutting tools in a dedicated deep drawer. For the most used, I took a board and drilled holes that were just over the shank size of each tap size. Ranked in 3 rows if taper, plug and bottoming and groups of NF and NC up to 1/2". Big ones (pipe up to 2") lay down. Also have one full set of US up to 3/4 in original Butterfield wooden box and one later vintage metric up to IIRC 16mm in its original box. Do the same with Prentiss bits from 33/64 up to 1" on the drill shelving.
 
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VoodooCLD

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Sep 12, 2014
Messages
415
Did you cut them in half? How many master sets did it take to outfit your drawer? Two?
I don't remember if they were cut exactly in half, but I did cut them length wise so they they were only as long as they needed to be. I also cut the width down on one end so it fit the width of the drawer. I ordered 4 of the smaller master sets and 2 of the larger, and put some in other drawers so I'm not exactly sure how many that drawer took.
 
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flippin

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May 24, 2010
Messages
740
Location
Montreal - Ottawa
Depending upon available space and frequency of use there are a few options that would organize your taps/dies nicely.

If you have counter/bench space available a parts organizer would do a nice job. Breakout the Brother P-Touch and in short order you'll have your new collection well organized and close at hand.

1671550651248.jpeg


If taps and or dies aren't something which will be used frequently I would think that Plano tackle trays (3600 or 3700) would protect and organize your new tools. Again labels are your best friend here too.

244620-37b6e99b6a1a97713c70003ce669c3ad.png

Lastly, my only other storage recommendation for taps and dies would be to spray them all on occasion with a rust preventer. The carbon steel rusts instantly and corroded taps are ruined taps. I use Boeshield because its not too thick/heavy but anything will help especially if you keep your tools in any unheated space.
 

e015475

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Joined
Jul 24, 2012
Messages
644
Location
Show Low and Mesa Arizona
Traced all my taps, dies and handles in Inkscape from photos I took on my iphone. Made the page size the same as my drawer in my 52" Harbor Freight tool box.

I'm going to send the .svg file off to a laser cutter and see if I can get a price to have it cut.

The local print shop will make a copy for a couple of bucks so I'll try to validate the layout with a paper print.

Tap and Die Drawer.jpg
 

lilredex

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Joined
Apr 29, 2006
Messages
5,956
Location
Toronto
A lot of them are in HUOT cabinets, the everyday T & Ds are in SK socket boxes.
 

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oldwino

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Joined
Nov 16, 2009
Messages
1,917
Location
Sonoma County California (wine country)
My storage is pretty simple and cheap.

drill bits, dyes and taps in a 2x3” envelope, labeled with size and put in an old card file. Organized, sorted and takes very little space.
i love the Schaller setup but don’t want to give up that much real estate
 

larry_g

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Joined
Apr 28, 2007
Messages
16,893
Location
oregon
For round 1" dies I have most of them on safety pins made from copper wire. I have them sorted by fine thread, coarse thread, metric, and some oddballs.
lg
no neat sig line
 

systemwiz

New member
Joined
Feb 25, 2023
Messages
1
I have a bunch of good HSS taps and dies. I 3D printed a custom holder for each size, with a spot for plug, taper, bottoming, gun, and spiral taps. I have finished my UNC taps and dies. Now for UNF and metric.



Lee
love these... got an .stl?
 

sonoronos

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Joined
Jan 11, 2017
Messages
175
If taps and or dies aren't something which will be used frequently I would think that Plano tackle trays (3600 or 3700) would protect and organize your new tools. Again labels are your best friend here too.

This. I use several cheap clear plano-style boxes from various stores (Hobby Lobby, Harbor Freight, etc) that hold all my taps and dies.

They serve the dual purpose of protecting them, allowing me to transport them easily, and store them easily.

If I had several hundred taps, this might be a different story, but with my 50 or so taps and dies, it works great.
 
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