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What did you do Today 2018

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Mike03/02/2018 12:05:27
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713 forum posts
6 photos

Hi Gordon. Yes, I know the Broch, but did you mean gluing together literally? I ask because after a previous argument I had with gravity, four years ago, a cut on my face was stuck together with superglue - presumably a special grade for first aid use. Result was, it healed without scarring. Dammit, I couldn't claim it was a duelling scar! Do welcome your wife to the "falling over" club, and wish her well.

robjon4403/02/2018 12:47:57
157 forum posts

Hi all, if I may here is my fourpennorth on cracked ribs, it is my unsubstantiated opinion that muscles surrounding the injury need something to push against so they push against the very last place that needs any more gyp, a tried & tested (by me) remedy is to wrap a broad scarf around your rib cage & tie it off, this in an emergency, later a snug fitting crepe or elastic bandage is the order of the day, accidents, barrack room horseplay or a playful nudge in the ribs from a ball ended motorcycle handlebar end lever have all responded favourably to this quick fix.

Bob.

Neil Wyatt03/02/2018 13:40:55
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19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

So far to day the main event has been drilling a 75mm chunk of 76mm diameter aluminium alloy 10mm then 3/4". Well worth having a few morse taper shank drills handy!

I have to open it up the 57mm, then a lot of milling on the outside.

I have a metre high waste bin that's about 1/3 full of aluminium swarf, but I reckon it will be full soon!

gary03/02/2018 13:59:40
164 forum posts
37 photos

the broch = fraseburgh = puddlestinker haha

Gordon W03/02/2018 16:44:56
2011 forum posts

Yes, literally glued. I asked her afterwards what glue and what, if any, hardener but she had not noticed and did not seem very interested. Today the silencer fell of my car. Think I will go to bed 'til March.

Mike03/02/2018 18:19:00
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713 forum posts
6 photos

I know how you feel, Gordon, but if public transport in your village is the is the same as in our area- and we are not that far apart - then a car is an absolute necessity. Mine's just cost me £546 for new discs and pads all round, or it wouldn't have passed its MOT later this year. In the old days they used to re-grind discs, but not any more, it seems. I recorded the rugby this afternoon, and I'm just off to watch it. Am I going to be ecstatic or disappointed? Regarding the glue, why don't women notice these things?

Muzzer03/02/2018 18:40:00
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2904 forum posts
448 photos
Posted by Mike on 03/02/2018 18:19:00:

I recorded the rugby this afternoon, and I'm just off to watch it. Am I going to be ecstatic or disappointed?

Huh, depends who you are supporting. Let's just say I'm about to put away the dusty kilt for another year....

Murray

Emgee03/02/2018 20:29:57
2610 forum posts
312 photos

Bored for and threaded M71x1.0mm thread as one end of an adapter to M42x0.75mm, the M42 external thread was already completed and the spigot bored 38mm diameter.

Emgee

**LINK**

Neil Wyatt03/02/2018 21:34:37
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19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

Ouch, over 60% of that billet has gone into the bin

The CCGT tips give an outstanding finish on the 6082 at a low feedrate.

Now a 76mm tube with 9.5mm walls with a bit of flange at each end.

Parted off using power feed and a MT parting tool. Must get some GT parting tips as it's nerve wracking relying on a brush to keep coolant down such a narrow deep groove. Without it if an aluminium edge build up starts it can get very big very quickly.

I still have to mill various holes in it.

Neil

ChrisH03/02/2018 22:24:00
1023 forum posts
30 photos

Rant for today.

Was reading another thread about water gauges, that Neil had posted a comment on which he mentioned MPa a few times, and I realised I didn't have a clue about what he was talking about. Reason, I cannot visualised what a MPa looks like. Looked it up on the internet and found a Magapasel is 1000000 newton/square metres. Which then produced another unknown - I have no idea what a newton looks like, never mind 1000000 newtons/sq.m.

OK, so I am old school who grew up, was trained and educated, and subsequently worked in the days of lbs/sq.in pressure and lb/ft force. But I know what a lb looks like, be it potatoes or sugar or whatever or metal weight. And I know what a sq.in looks like and what a foot looks like, and can visualise a 1lb weight acting on 1sq.in or on the end of a rod of 1foot length. Ditto with kg/sq.cm for those who think I am just anti metric which I am not . But what does a newton look like? Who sells stuff by the newton? Someone describe what a newton of spuds or sugar looks like to me. You can't because no-one outside a lab deals with them, they deal with weights of lbs and ounces or kg and grammes. (cue millions of posts by folk who claim they deal in newtons every day!). It is all very well for clever folk heavily into scientific metric units talking about newtons/ sq.m or megapascals, but they are meaningless unless one can visualise what one is talking about.

So why on earth don't we all talk in terms of units we can all understand and visualise? Or has the nanny state taken over completely and we cannot think for ourselves? I thought the latter only applied to the snowflake brigade.

I work in feet and inches and thousands of an inch, and in meters and millimetres and so on, and in lbs and in kgs, - properly ambidextrous! -all as required, but I can not and will not work or talk in units that mean nothing to me, or to anyone that I can see, outside a science lab.

Sorry Neil, this is definitely NOT a rant about you at all, just using your post as a jumping off point, but about the stupid situation we are being driven into these days it seems. Or perhaps I am getting too old and set in my ways!

So endth the rant for today!

Chris

 

Edited By ChrisH on 03/02/2018 22:26:24

Robbo03/02/2018 23:55:57
1504 forum posts
142 photos
Posted by robjon44 on 03/02/2018 12:47:57:

Hi all, if I may here is my fourpennorth on cracked ribs, it is my unsubstantiated opinion that muscles surrounding the injury need something to push against so they push against the very last place that needs any more gyp, a tried & tested (by me) remedy is to wrap a broad scarf around your rib cage & tie it off, this in an emergency, later a snug fitting crepe or elastic bandage is the order of the day, accidents, barrack room horseplay or a playful nudge in the ribs from a ball ended motorcycle handlebar end lever have all responded favourably to this quick fix.

Bob.

Many many years ago our rugby team hooker, a mad Scotsman, "swung" too low (other hookers will know what this means) and got a couple of cracked ribs for his efforts. The next week he turned up wearing his wife's roll-on corset as a support. (He left the suspenders on and wore it upside down).

Michael Gilligan04/02/2018 00:21:03
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23121 forum posts
1360 photos
Posted by ChrisH on 03/02/2018 22:24:00:

But what does a newton look like? Who sells stuff by the newton? Someone describe what a newton of spuds or sugar looks like to me.

.

That's the easy one, Chris

A newton is approximately 0.225 pounds force

Therefore, to a reasonable approximation, it is the force exerted [in Earth's gravity] by the weight of a typical [small] Apple.

The clue is in the name angel

MichaelG.

Edited By Michael Gilligan on 04/02/2018 00:29:02

Mark Rand04/02/2018 00:48:50
1505 forum posts
56 photos

Also, a megaPascal is 10 bars AKA approx 10 atmospheres AKA approx 145psi.

Simples...

Brian H04/02/2018 07:57:43
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2312 forum posts
112 photos

I'll stick with lbs, oz, feet and inches.

Brian

Mike04/02/2018 08:24:17
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713 forum posts
6 photos

Well said, Brian. Me too.!

richardandtracy04/02/2018 08:27:01
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943 forum posts
10 photos

An MPa is a Newton/mm^2. Most stress engineers work in N/mm^2 rather than MPa because the numbers are too big.

There are 144.9885 psi in every N/mm^2

Standard 'grade 43' structural steel, S275, yields at 275 N/mm^2.

Anyway, some of those mental hooks may be useful.

Regards

Richard.

robjon4404/02/2018 09:59:06
157 forum posts

Hi all, glad to see that some of our learned colleagues can enlighten us on the values of some of the metric measurements that have crept into our daily lives, perhaps one of them can tell us the exact value of the term "load" in the collective noun "a load of testicles".

Bob.

roy entwistle04/02/2018 10:02:27
1716 forum posts

Lbs, Pints and Furlongs for me too

Roy ( I can work in millipedes as well ) smiley

Edited By roy entwistle on 04/02/2018 10:02:55

pa4c pa4c04/02/2018 10:04:45
16 forum posts

perhaps one of them can tell us the exact value of the term "load" in the collective noun "a load of testicles".

Well, that isnt straightforward either. Is this a single load or a double load? Bearing in mind my old pal Brian had three testicles, there is always a variable.

Mike04/02/2018 10:12:00
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713 forum posts
6 photos

Tell me this: if this Brexit thing ever becomes reality, shall we be allowed to return to what my dear,late mother always referred to as "God's measurements?"

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