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Threaded rod

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Former Member04/07/2019 12:07:14
1329 forum posts

[This posting has been removed]

Duane Ayres04/07/2019 18:18:07
16 forum posts

This site could have the Country after our name: "John Doe USA",abbreviated versions; Grmny,UK(covers most of Europe/England) You know about ancestry kits? I'm part Germanic,Wales/Welsh, Scottish and Irish. I have a cousin that his first and middle are opposite of mine; my dad asks if his sister who was also adopted had any originality,lol..I had checked prior to getting on this site, checking with McMaster (they have the thrust bearings) , jig knobs with 4 prongs/arms, 5/16 x -18 female through hole. We have other woodworking sources; Woodcraft store, Rockler stores, Lowes and Home Depot(Lumber/hardware tools etc). In Arizona there is a "Woodworkers Source" store,I've been to them several times.

Duane Ayres04/07/2019 18:41:18
16 forum posts

Yeah, making that threaded pot,must have been madding. Where is NZ? ( I see you in a uniform;USAF)? Lathes turn too fast to do threads, there is mechanism that is turned by a handle,has a 1" pulley and a 2" pulley both with cord,a router sits on a bracket with a special bit. Someone turns the router on and turns the handle, it make thread like designs into a rounded piece of wood(the router moves quicker than the wood, due to the 2" pulley). A Dremel tool is usually 1/4",not sure what bit to use, a 1/4" trim router may work with a 1/4" shank bit, don't know if a double angle bit comes with 1/4" shank. I have a smaller size router like WoodSmith used,have to check if the 1/2" shank will work on it(would take a 1/2" collet.

Former Member04/07/2019 18:43:04
1329 forum posts

[This posting has been removed]

Duane Ayres04/07/2019 18:50:45
16 forum posts

LOL Dave, So true. There was time where one would have to say the name of where they are;before so many European Countries used UK right? What is the price of gas? or are Electric cars used more there? WoodSmith have a lot of projects they done, so many are free to get the plans for, many have to pay for.

Duane Ayres04/07/2019 19:01:22
16 forum posts

You're correct, I spell surname Ayres, I have they history of the name, old version was eyre, the man( in the time of Knights was Truelove, some decided for him to shorten it. Eventually the spelling changed. People will at times look at the spelling my family use and still write with the "e" before the "r".

Hope this won't turn to a topic

Howard Lewis04/07/2019 21:31:55
7227 forum posts
21 photos

Duane,

Off topic. To avoid confusion, I am a UK resident,

We dwell in two nations divided by a common language.

You put gas into the tank of your automobile. We cook with gas, (Natural gas) and put petrol into our cars.

Our diesel engined cars run on DERV, (Diesel Engined Road Vehicles ) The same fuel, with a red dye is for off rood machines, and called Gas Oil. The red dye is intended to stop naughty people using it in their road vehicles, to avoid paying the tax on road fuel.

DON'T ask the price of our fuel. About of half of what we pay is tax! the cheapest petrol is £1.295 per litre, Tis is £5.89 per UK gallon, (yours is about 20% smaller )

Because our forefathers travelled the world, there are towns and cities named after UK ones. We also have a New York, but a LOT smaller than yours; scarcely a village!

Now what was this thread about originally?

Howard

Duane Ayres04/07/2019 23:14:08
16 forum posts

We have regular unleaded and Diesel, also have a special fuel. We have natural gas to run water heaters, propane for several items like BBQ grill many have gas stoves;restaurants always have gas stoves. We use liter here,measurement for soda bottles,car engines etc. FYI, we're paying $2.80 9/10(regardless of the $ amount;the 9/10 stays the same/tax).

The thread: threaded rods/woodworking

Former Member05/07/2019 06:35:21
1329 forum posts

[This posting has been removed]

not done it yet05/07/2019 08:21:35
7517 forum posts
20 photos

This site does not (necessarily) have a country origin after your screen name - include it if you wish, mind. It does, however have a “profile” facility which, if everyone used it, could provide adequate info for most interested parties, were it to be used. It is there for exactly that purpose - to show your profile.

ega05/07/2019 11:03:49
2805 forum posts
219 photos
Posted by not done it yet on 05/07/2019 08:21:35:

This site does not (necessarily) have a country origin after your screen name - include it if you wish, mind. It does, however have a “profile” facility which, if everyone used it, could provide adequate info for most interested parties, were it to be used. It is there for exactly that purpose - to show your profile.

Plus 1!

I live in hope that those who have NDIY will see the point of posting a public profile with some general indication of their whereabouts.

Ian S C05/07/2019 12:56:18
avatar
7468 forum posts
230 photos

NZ is New Zealand, go to around 45* south, and 180 longitude, a bit to the right of Australia. The uniform is RNZAF from the 1960s.

The usual little Dremel has a 1/8" collet, and a little cutter ,3/8" to 1/2" would work well, and you could put a thread in a hole less than 1" dia. I think you are thinking of a die grinder with the 1/4" collet chuck.

This is another way of cutting spirals, I have a nephew a cabinet maker who has one of these in his workshop at home.

Ian S C

router lathe_new (640x526).jpg

Duane Ayres05/07/2019 23:26:43
16 forum posts

So the uniform is from the Air Force from NZ. That is/was sold by Sears Roebuck,make spirals both ways(clockwise/counterclockwise). Should have bought one when they were at Sears 30-40 years ago. I image one can adjust it to move the wood a little quicker, router a little slower,with a smaller bit to make threads in an piece of wood. Routers in wood working come two way, some only have a 1/4" collet ,others(bigger ones/ 1/2" that can be sized down for 1/4" using an insert. Off topic: You used the " * " for the degree symbol,why don't we have more symbols on our keyboards?

Mike Poole06/07/2019 08:30:17
avatar
3676 forum posts
82 photos

On a PC press and hold the ALT key and only on the number pad type 0176 and releases ALT, you should have a ° symbol. On iPhone and iPad tap and hold the Zero pad and slide finger to the pad that appears with the ° symbol remove finger from pad and it should insert the symbol.

Mike

Duane Ayres06/07/2019 21:03:37
16 forum posts

Cool, Why not incorporate the check mark,degree symbols into keyboards?

SillyOldDuffer07/07/2019 13:44:57
10668 forum posts
2415 photos
Posted by Duane Ayres on 06/07/2019 21:03:37:

Cool, Why not incorporate the check mark,degree symbols into keyboards?

It's because there are so many symbols you have to stop somewhere! Unicode defines about 137,000 characters, which would need a big keyboard!

Fortunately most symbols aren't required much. However, when unusual characters are needed, you can look them up and type them in as described by Mike. (Other magic methods available, including cut and paste.)

Engineers want symbols like ° ± ø ℃ μ Ω λ π

An accountant might want currency $ £ € ¥

Chess players ♔ ♛ ♘ ♜

and so on.

Also common for computers to be set-up to work entirely in a local language like Hebrew or Arabic. They don't use the Roman alphabet and are typed right to left. For them, our symbols are the weird ones! I'd guess £ is rarely used in the USA, apart from that and a few positional differences, a British Keyboard is almost identical to an American keyboard. Spelling and words can be excellent fun, for example, 'pants' in England are underpants aka shorts, and it's not acceptable to go outside in them.

Dave

Duane Ayres07/07/2019 15:32:49
16 forum posts

I would see this ’ in paragraphs etc. in emails presumably from girls that want to date(?), those emails are Malware, I have Malwarebytes, detects Malware sites to protect my PC. WE have ~ ` ! @ # $ % ^ & * ( ) _ + = | \ { } [ ] : ; " ' ? / < > . Ω is Omega, £ for English pounds(?). About short pants? lol, Levi's/ denim shorts can be worn outside. Underpants or Linger'e obviously can't or should not be seen outside(not without people snickering). Now an Asian keyboard...most have up to 1000 characters.

Duane Ayres07/07/2019 15:37:22
16 forum posts

There is Null 'n void, Nil (not in location). To me # is tic-tac-toe/pound sign/number symbol, Not hash-tag

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