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Reviewed in the United States on September 7, 2024
Says it's a thread chaser, but feels and looks like a tap. I have not cut new threads in a blank hole with this tool. I have only used it to 'rethread and clean' existing holes, which it has worked for that purpose. The exact one I have is https://amzn.to/4d4ASko
Todd
Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2024
I needed to 'repair' a through-threaded hole in an item I recently purchased. A bolt would only thread in from one side and not the other. I didn't want to use a regular tap and chance wallowing out the good threads. This thread chaser easily screwed into the good threaded side and cleaned up the few bad threads on the other side. The bolt then appeared to thread in by hand the same (not with any more play), but now all the way through and from the other direction, also - exactly what I was hoping for.
Lumberjack Engineering
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2024
For $25, you're getting close to the price of a quality M16 tap. This thread chaser seems expensive for what it is - quality seems OK, but nothing special. I'd recommend investing in a Lang kit or something similar instead.
PLin
Reviewed in the United States on July 3, 2024
I tried using this on my wheel hub, and it didn't go in smoothly, even with brake cleaner and a degreaser. Thread chasers are not supposed to get caught. I compared it to another one to see if it was a problem with the threads in the hub, but the others didn't have the same problem. This could be a manufacturing tolerance issue.
Rogue
Reviewed in the United States on July 25, 2024
Good tap, no issues.
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