NASA and many other manufacturers use them in the NEW manufacturing process because they are stronger and more durable than cut threads in parent metal. Likewise stripped parent metal threads repaired with a helical STI will be stronger and more durable than the original thread. Thats an engineering fact supported by reams of testing.
Now to further muddy the waters we have added FUD about STI taps and inserts purchased from Amazon to the discussion. Apparently using them to repair stripped threads in a lousy oil pan drain bung poses a mortal threat to your tractor.
In the short time I've been here you're one of the most respected members here. You're obviously very intelligent, and your advice is reasoned, complete, and extremely helpful.
I've benefited multiple times from it myself, and I greatly appreciate it.
I'm not sure why the "mortal threat" comment is there; I certainly never implied or stated anything close to that. And it runs contrary to your usual quality of discourse.
How much of that strength is because the parent material is a softer material, like aluminum or delrin?
There are also other reasons helicoils are used, aside from thread strength. Which have nothing to do with an oil drain plug repair.
NASA engineering (and industrial to a lesser extent) is held to a much higher standard than regular mechanic fixes, never mind backyard fixes.
Tool quality, machining accuracy, and material quality are more demanding than any repair the OP is going to do. And those higher standards directly effect the thread quality.
Do you really think if the OP (or you or I) helicoils that hole it would hold up to NASA testing?
What your effectively saying is because a NASA tire can withstand X amount of heat/stress any other tire should be able to do the same.
My original comment wasn't an observation on the advisability of using helicoils in general, it was about using a helicoil in this specific instance.
As I've already stated, I've used helicoils many times. They definitely have their place.
If the metal is completely shot, I would use a helicoil too.
My point was simply that they shouldn't be the very first option if thread is damaged, especially something that's going to be regularly removed and reinstalled, like an oil drain plug. There are easier, better options to try first FOR THIS SPECIFIC FIX.
@dlm: what engine oil were you using that caused your drain plug to strip out?
Probably Shell Rotella. I heard that stuff is crap....
Running two different thread pitches in the same hole makes absolutely no sense, you are just removing even more metal from the damaged hole.
Changing the pitch and location of the thread sometimes gives it enough strength to hold.
Sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't.
It's just the next step up before you make the hole larger.
I wouldn't use it on all repairs ( a head bolt for example ), but for this low torque hole it may work.
*To clarify, my aversion to helicoils in this particular instance is
-the difficulty in drilling/tapping/installing the helicoil straight and true while lying on your back underneath the tractor. The quality of the hole effects how well the helicoil will hold, and if the helicoil ends up crooked it can impact how well the plug will seal.
-the difficulty in completely cleaning the threads of oil residue
-the likelihood of the first thread to "unwind" itself over time with repeated use
If you do use a helicoil (considering the damage to the threads you may have to), make sure
-it's not longer or inserted further than the welded bung
-use blue thread sealant (red is too permanent for most things IMO) to lube/lock the helicoil in place
-clean the new threads well so the thread sealant can bond
-don't just use a dab of sealant, you want all the threads coated
-make sure the helicoil is installed a half turn or so past flush with the sealing surface.*