Drilling and Tapping Hardwoods

by Bill WW in Workshop > Woodworking

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Drilling and Tapping Hardwoods

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Drilling and tapping hardwoods
 
There are several ways to attach threaded metal fasteners into wood fixtures. For example,  inserts and  t-nuts can be used to add  a threaded connection to a jig. But often I prefer to drill and tap threads directly into the wood fixture.  Many hardwoods can be drilled and tapped, however softwoods lack the necessary machinability and holding capacity. The best wood I have used for threading is Jatoba,  (Brazilian Cherry). Jatoba is very dense, hard, fine grained, and threads extremely well. Oak and Padauk are fine also. I find these threaded wood fixtures hold a bolt extremely well.
 
Hardwood is a forgiving material to drill and tap. Use a 5/16” drill bit for 3/8” threads, 7/32”  bit for 1/4 “.  I don’t thread anything less than 1/2”  thickness. Use a standard coarse tap to cut the screw threads. 
 
Making threaded woodworking jigs, clamps, furniture handles and knobs from exotic hardwoods adds a beautiful touch to projects.  Material is not cheap, but these parts are small so final cost is low.