Object Details
maker
unknown
Description
Staybolt taps were used by boilermakers when installing or repairing the fireboxes of steam locomotives. Taps" are designed to cut threads into drilled holes, so that threaded bolts or threaded machine screws can be screwed in. The long tap was screwed into pre-drilled holes through the boiler's outer steel shell and into the steel firebox within the boiler. The tap cut threads into the hole in the outer boiler shell and also into a corresponding hole in the firebox. The tapped hole permitted a "staybolt" to be inserted and screwed into place; each staybolt held the boiler shell and the firebox firmly together."
This tool is part of a collection of hand tools used in the inspection and repair of steam locomotives in Salisbury, North Carolina from the early- to the mid-20th century, roughly 1900-1955. Light repairs on steam locomotives were usually done in roundhouses at the many small locomotive terminals
Credit Line
Gift of National Park Service
Date made
1940s
date made
ca. 1940s
ID Number
2002.0075.02
catalog number
2002.0075.02
accession number
2002.0075
Object Name
Staybolt tap
Physical Description
steel (overall material)
Measurements
overall: 18 in; x 45.72 cm
See more items in
Work and Industry: Transportation, Railroad
Work
America on the Move
Transportation
Exhibition
America On The Move
Exhibition Location
National Museum of American History
Data Source
National Museum of American History
Subject
Railroads
Link to Original Record
Record ID
nmah_1212991