Plugging along. Got the heat sinks drilled and tapped. I don't drill all the way through, and since most hardware stores in this overgrown cow town rarely have bottom taps on the shelf, I just buy two regular ones and dress the starter off of one of them. Otherwise, the holes are always on the verge of not having enough threads. I like to leave the bottom most threads just a bit incomplete, so that the screws cut that final half turn and really locks them in good.
It's Important to keep all the swarf cleared from the holes when dealing with such small, fine threads in aluminum or they can be washed out easy by the debris. As far as oil in this case, less is more, and something like olive oil is just sticky enough to hold the swarf into the flutes of the tap. Of course you want to back it out and clean the tap frequently. I used the circuit board, taped to the heat sink to mark the holes with the drill bit first.
I actually drilled the 4 standoff holes first, and then screwed the board with the MOSFETS in place to mark those last two holes last. It's nice when all the screws will start without a wrench.
Here, I was using the board fastened with the standoffs in place to mark the the MOSFETS with a drill bit, before removing the works to drill and tap those. I didn't even bother with the drill press.
Everything lines up. Now all I have to do is solder the leads to the MOSFETS in place. I have the thermal insulators in place. I have the mica/paste system as well but maybe try this way for a change. Either way, success. There is still a thermistor that gets mounted Next to the MOSFETS, and they get bent over until they touch that metal washer on the FET.
Power supply parts won't be here until the end of the week. In the mean time, I will make some of the chassis sub frame parts at work this week, like the rails that mount to the heat sink. Going to use some wood on it somehow.
Also have a tube pre/headphone amp kit to build at some point.