Rev Counter
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Re: Rev Counter
Den I sympathise, here we are allowed Imperial still, but a lot of stuff got forced to Metric over the last 20 years or so. Torque wrenches are one particular thing I cannot reconcile. We used to have Lbs/feet (or foot/lbs) or Kg/mtrs to measure them, now we have Newtons/mtrs. I have never yet managed to get some one to demonstrate me a Newton/mtr. Yet I can demonstrate lbs/feet instantly with a rule and a weight, and even replicate it if I haven't got a torque wrench handy. It is a totally unnecessary complication IMHO.
Retirement is about doing what floats your boat!
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
- artemis
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Re: Rev Counter
In the interests of listening to the words of wisdom from those wiser than us (or at least wiser than me), I give these words from Professor W. J. Macquorn Rankine (you know, the "Rankine Cycle").Mike Rometer wrote:Den I sympathise, here we are allowed Imperial still, but a lot of stuff got forced to Metric over the last 20 years or so. Torque wrenches are one particular thing I cannot reconcile. We used to have Lbs/feet (or foot/lbs) or Kg/mtrs to measure them, now we have Newtons/mtrs. I have never yet managed to get some one to demonstrate me a Newton/mtr. Yet I can demonstrate lbs/feet instantly with a rule and a weight, and even replicate it if I haven't got a torque wrench handy. It is a totally unnecessary complication IMHO.
The Three-Foot Rule
by William John Macquorn Rankine
"When I was a bound apprentice, and learned to use my hands,
Folk never talked of measures that came from foreign lands:
Now I'm a British workman, too old to go to school;
So whether the chisel or file I hold, I'll stick to my three-foot rule.
"Some talk of millimetres, and some of kilogrammes,
And some of decilitres, to measure beer and drams;
But I'm a British workman, too old to go to school;
So by pounds I'll eat, and by quarts I'll drink, and I'll work by my
three-foot rule.
"A party of astronomers went measuring the earth,
and forty million metres they took to be its girth;
Five hundred million inches, though, go through from pole to pole;
So let's stick to inches, feet, and yards, and the good old three-foot
rule.
"The great Egyptian pyramid's a thousand yards about;
And when the masons finished it, they raised a joyful shout;
The chap that planned that building, I'm bound he was no fool;
And now 'tis proved beyond a doubt, he used a three-foot rule.
"Here's a health to every learned man that goes by common sense,
And would not plague the workman on any vain pretence;
But as for those philantropists, who'd send us back to school,
Oh, bless their eyes, if they ever tries to put down the three-foot rule."
- DetroiTug
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Re: Rev Counter
Metric is much simpler than the Imperial system. Like Fred, I too remember the big push to go metric about 40 years ago. Still have not seen it happen. And it won't until all the mills switch - Steel, lumber, textiles etc.
The US automotives jumped right on the metric switch back in the 70's. There is no telling how much that has cost them over the years. Everything a supplier does they charge for. Every time someone has to convert a print or change over a machine or buy special tooling, etc. They get charged.
Metric fasteners are much better, threadpitch to shank diameter ratio. Take the Imperial 10-24 tap, that thing is born looking for a place to snap off.
-Ron
The US automotives jumped right on the metric switch back in the 70's. There is no telling how much that has cost them over the years. Everything a supplier does they charge for. Every time someone has to convert a print or change over a machine or buy special tooling, etc. They get charged.
Metric fasteners are much better, threadpitch to shank diameter ratio. Take the Imperial 10-24 tap, that thing is born looking for a place to snap off.

-Ron
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Re: Rev Counter
Ahh but Ron, in my experience if you've got a well rusted in metric bolt, it won't ever come out in one peice, when an imperial one has at least a 50/50 chance, and good old Whitworth almost always will.
Sorry, was born, weighed in lbs and ozs, measured in inches, I got Imperial written all through me like a sick of seaside rock (candy to you)!

Sorry, was born, weighed in lbs and ozs, measured in inches, I got Imperial written all through me like a sick of seaside rock (candy to you)!


Retirement is about doing what floats your boat!
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
- Lopez Mike
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Re: Rev Counter
I just finished dealing with a customer who is possessed of a drafting program on his home computer. This is often good for a laugh as they seldom have any practical experience with tolerances and such.
The drawing he brought along was fairly typical. The tolerances, if read literally, were to one part in a million. The highlight, however, was a blind tapped 6 x 32 hole over an inch in depth in steel.
He was interested in my short tutorial on coarse v.s. fine threads and why this specification might be suitable for getting a good grip in room temperature butter. And whether such a hole had ever been created with taps made of any conceivable material.
We sat down with half of a brown paper bag and a grease pencil and created something doable with my skills and equipment and within his budget.
The hard part is that in my position running a small shop dealing with the public, I have to be a mechanical engineer, a metallurgist, a programmer, and an electronics engineer just to get by. It ain't what it used to be. And I have no idea what these customers will do when my generation finally shuffles off this mortal coil.
The drawing he brought along was fairly typical. The tolerances, if read literally, were to one part in a million. The highlight, however, was a blind tapped 6 x 32 hole over an inch in depth in steel.
He was interested in my short tutorial on coarse v.s. fine threads and why this specification might be suitable for getting a good grip in room temperature butter. And whether such a hole had ever been created with taps made of any conceivable material.
We sat down with half of a brown paper bag and a grease pencil and created something doable with my skills and equipment and within his budget.
The hard part is that in my position running a small shop dealing with the public, I have to be a mechanical engineer, a metallurgist, a programmer, and an electronics engineer just to get by. It ain't what it used to be. And I have no idea what these customers will do when my generation finally shuffles off this mortal coil.
If you think you are too small to make a difference, try sleeping with a mosquito.
Dalai Lama
Dalai Lama
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Re: Rev Counter
Amen to that!
If they, (the younger generation) can't do it with a keyboard, they're stuck, or in our vernacular "Up the proverbial creek without a paddle" never mind a steam engine.

If they, (the younger generation) can't do it with a keyboard, they're stuck, or in our vernacular "Up the proverbial creek without a paddle" never mind a steam engine.


Retirement is about doing what floats your boat!
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
A BODGE : - A Bit Of Damn Good Engineering.
- artemis
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Re: Rev Counter
There are still some businesses in the USA (albeit located in the "backcountry") that still cater to the inexperienced or uninformed - that includes those who require a mouse or keyboard to find anything. See below:Mike Rometer wrote:Amen to that!
If they, (the younger generation) can't do it with a keyboard, they're stuck, or in our vernacular "Up the proverbial creek without a paddle" never mind a steam engine.![]()

Those of us "oldtimers" know where to find these places. Keyboard junkies can Google "shit creek paddle stores"
