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Forged in Zreče, Slovenia since 1919. Official technical partner of multiple World Tour and downhill teams.
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A BSA BB tap is a serviceable item. The cutting teeth are what chase the thread, and after enough cuts they lose the sharp edge that lets them feed through a paint-fresh shell cleanly. The 1697.1 BSA cutters are the replacement pair, sized to the 1697 tap holder, so a shop that's wearing cutters on a busy bench can swap them in without buying a new complete tap set.
What this piece does
The 1697.1 BSA tap cutter set is the BSA-thread cutting end of the 1697 BB tap system. The pair comes in matched right-hand and left-hand cuts (R for non-drive, L for drive), with the same 1.37″ × 24 TPI BSA pitch as the original 1697 cutters. Mount them into the BSA tap holders, put the holders on the modular handles, and the system is ready for the next shell.
Use cases
- Replacement. When the original 1697 cutters are dull beyond resharpening. The cutting teeth take the working load; once they round off, swarf comes off as chunks instead of ribbons, and that's the cue to swap.
- Configurable kit. If you already own a 1698 Italian tap system and need BSA capability, buying the BSA cutters and the BSA tap holders is enough to chase BSA threads with the same handles you already have. The modular pattern is designed for this kind of bench expansion.
Compatibility
- BSA-threaded BB shells (1.37″ × 24 TPI)
- Fits the BSA Bottom Bracket Tap Holder 1697.2/4
- Drives through the modular frame-prep handles 1695.1/4BI
Specs
- Thread: 1.37″ × 24 TPI (BSA)
- Pair: one right-hand cutter (non-drive), one left-hand cutter (drive)
- Made in Slovenia by Unior
Includes: Right-hand BSA tap cutter, left-hand BSA tap cutter. Tap holders and handles sold separately.
Made in Slovenia, since 1919
Unior has been forging hand tools in Zreče since 1919, and is the official technical partner of multiple World Tour and downhill teams. The taps themselves are the working face of the BB-prep system; everything else (holders, handles, frame) is structure. Selling them as a replaceable pair is the same logic that drives the rest of the modular frame-prep catalog.
Pro tip from our mechanics
Paint film is the first thing a fresh cutter pair eats through, and it's also the thing that takes a real bite out of cutting-edge life. On a heavily-painted shell, the first quarter-turn pass passes through paint, not metal; the cutter edge sees abrasive paint film, not the cleaner cut of bare thread. Keeping a worn-but-not-retired pair around for that first paint-clearing pass extends the life of the sharper replacement pair.
The mount-orientation safety check before each install: cutters carry a TIGHTEN or R/L stamp on the body, and the stamp has to face the side of the shell the cutter will work on. A drive-side (left-hand thread) cutter mounted on the non-drive holder cuts in the wrong direction; it either won't bite or galls the shell threads. When a cutter starts producing chunky swarf instead of ribbons, it's done; sharpening BB tap cutters isn't a workshop operation, so order the replacement pair and rotate.
The BSA-shell walk-through covers paint film, swarf morphology, and the dual-tap simultaneous-drive setup that keeps the cutters parallel through the shell: Frame prep: threaded bottom bracket shells →