Kawboy:
Oh Boy !!
First, for those that don't know, taps come in 3 different styles.
LOLOL You like to amuse yourself, don't you! haha I see that 3 tap styles principle hasn't changed since the 1980's then!! haha But there is something you are missing there kawboy (no pun intended lol). Some taps come with flat tips, some don't. And they don't have to be starter or bottom.
So it happened that the duplicates of each size I inherited came all in one style. Not the start style for sure, but by the looks all with very nice sharp threads till the end and with very nice conical tips! Cheaper to grind one flatter than buying a whole new set ending up with more of the same, right? Especially when they are metric and not widely available.
Example. This might be useful for anyone fighting with attaching the tank badges. Those threads for the tiny screws require a tap size 3 mm - 0.50. It's marked as size #39. Guess what - I found only one available at a local specialty store! No set - just one tap. And if you don't know, as far as I remember, these tiny taps come often with conical tips - not flat. So, I had to grind that down a bit because otherwise I'd be puncturing the poor tank with the pointy tip and I just had it sealed and painted! Job done!
In Europe, we actually had taps marked from 1 to 3. I think it was in Latin - I, II, III. I can't find that on the taps purchased in Canada, but I see the NC and NF. We also were writing months in Latin. If you're born on December 11, you'd mark 11, XII. I have no clue if that has changed, but I am just trying to point out that some things, including technical matters, are not as black and white.
I am just looking at taps I have here, made in Canada, and some marked NF are conical, some flat. Actually, I don't see even one marked NEF in the collection I have. And there are taps that don't have any markings like that. And repeating myself again, some identical looking taps come flat, some conical. I am not a machinist nor am I intending to become one, so I want be reading any books on taps and dies, lol And I'd argue that an average Joe like me, or rather Stan - don't call me Joe
hahaha, might work sometimes with what they have thinking outside the box and improvising. So, in my case, having all the taps and none marked NEF, I am perfectly fine with grinding some to make them bottom friendly (no pun intended again). I am all the way for proper and good quality tools for the job, but unless threading some deep holes in thick steel, I'd say grinding a tap for refreshing some threads in aluminum, or even cutting some fine threaded new, is adequate measures for the job.
Now, regarding those two concerning questions:
- From the list of the sizes of these Holley carb jets, being from 50 to 109, which size corresponds to the desired hole size 3/32" size, or that mentioned earlier Mikuni 280?
- 1/4 x 32" tap, what is the actual correct corresponding tap size - in metric?