|
08-11-2018, 07:46 PM | #23 | ||||||
|
Aligning screwheads on any given product lends a ‘finished’ appearance to the work and serves to give the buyer confidence in the care and attention, and pride, given by the craftsmen.
.
__________________
"I'm a Setter man. Not because I think they're better than the other breeds, but because I'm a romantic - stuck on tradition - and to me, a Setter just "belongs" in the grouse picture." George King, "That's Ruff", 2010 - a timeless classic. |
||||||
The Following User Says Thank You to Dean Romig For Your Post: |
08-11-2018, 08:37 PM | #24 | |||||||
|
I never came close to becoming a master but, before stepping foot into a machine shop, I apprenticed in a cabinet shop for a couple yrs. "time the screws" was the nomenclature always used for the task that is the subject of this thread. Later, once I made my way into a machine shop, the "proper" term was indeed, "qualify" but really, it's all in the context of the objective at hand. In other words, if adjusting a bleed screw to get the timing right on a machine peripheral to assure a proper sequence of events..you TIME the screws. If machining a screw that has divisions on its face designed to line up against a mating parts fixed division, you set the TIMING in order to QUALIFY the assembly.
Quote:
|
|||||||
08-11-2018, 08:58 PM | #25 | ||||||
|
Oh... the grouse don’t care what direction the screws are pointing. So I have been told before about these details as well as others.
__________________
B. Dudley |
||||||
The Following User Says Thank You to Brian Dudley For Your Post: |
08-11-2018, 09:22 PM | #26 | ||||||
|
PM sent
__________________
"The road was long, but he knew where he was going..." ~Corey Ford, The Road to Tinkhamtown |
||||||
08-11-2018, 09:28 PM | #27 | ||||||
|
There are likely a great many pirates rolling in their graves every time they hear a MarLINE knife referred to as a Marlin knife..wonder how many poor souls had to walk the plank for that one..
|
||||||
|
|