KE4AVB wrote:BGS what you are referring to is thread forming (cold forming) taps not to be confused thread cutting taps. They form thread by pressing threads into the material which raises threads instead of cutting them. A similar process is use on screws (bolts) to form threads that captive washers.
What we normally see are the thread cutting version.
Yep..(however the original threads were actually cast in the mold way back when, so I was told, by the Briggs distributor rep - this was back in the 80's, and we had a Briggs distributor just 40 minute drive from my shop) but I was not even sure if they are available in singles (any time I saw them, you'd have to buy like a 25-pack from an industrial supplier, had to have a tax license, commercial credit account, and orders had to be called in by phone or fax..) So.. I simply offered an alternative that I had used (once, ever, and as I said it was a DULL tap.. it got stuck and we used a torch to h eat the metal it was in to get it out.. in the process, destroying its temper.,.. it never cut again after that but for some reason it was still in the shop toolbox.. it had yet to be tossed in the scrap pile... ) and again, if the formed threads are gone, chances are the carb body no longer has enough meat left anyway to form new threads, but if a dull tap can raise some ridges just enough to get a friction fit, it might be rescued... otherwise it's yet another old carb body to be tossed on a scrap pile... as I don't know if any kind of liquid adhesive would be enough on its own to hold the tube in place (at least not on a permanently usable basis)
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)