So I picked up a piece of OAK today. I figured it would be that little bit tougher given the weight that will be in the cabinet.
The cost of 3/8-16 T-Nuts at Lowes was $2.69 each. Yikes. So I left thinking perhaps I'd weld nuts onto washers. But then I thought, once in place 3/4" worth of thread should be more than enough. I can always coat the threads with epoxy and chase the threads with the tap again if they aren't very good.
So first trial was with some 3/4" plywood and tapped. The foot threaded in fine.
Next some MDF. The one on the right is hand tapped and the 5/16" machinist drill bit did a clean job of making the hole for tapping.
The one on the left was drilled with a 1/4" shank 5/16" drill bit that is at least 40 years old from my first drill set bought at Sears in Edmonton. It's a bit bent so it wobbles and since I ran the power cycle for drilling a number of times at different speeds the hole is a tad oversize.
But the power tapping, once I figured out how to do it again went well after I realized that for whatever reason, the G84 would not work while the G33.1 does. That's what you get for not doing this for more than half a year.
Now all of this research to figure out how to power tap, dig out another collet holder, figure out how to set tool lengths etc. into the tool table with the new spiral tap (was still in plastic wrapping) took about 3 hours. Could have hand tapped the two pieces, four holes, in 15 minutes.
But I needed the practice at the CNC side of things. I'll grab a 5/16" collet and use the machinist drill bit for the actual holes. Line the wood up even with the end of the vise and then each hole will be drilled and tapped at the exact same spot at each end. That will probably take me another 3 hours.