The Merry Miller | 17/03/2011 09:09:06 |
![]() 484 forum posts 97 photos | Correct me if I was seeing things but was the clockmaker in last nights program using a micrometer as a "G" clamp? |
Chris Gunn | 17/03/2011 09:35:16 |
459 forum posts 28 photos | Yes I thought he was using an old mike for a G clamp as well. Do you think they are trying to recreate Fred Dibnah after the steeple jack segment last night as well as the format they are using? Is it a bit lightweight?
Chris Gunn |
The Merry Miller | 17/03/2011 09:43:53 |
![]() 484 forum posts 97 photos | My feelings entirely Chris. |
John Shepherd | 17/03/2011 12:03:39 |
222 forum posts 7 photos | Firstly there is no comparison with Fed Dibnah! and yes there is a lot wrong with the program if you take it too seriously but being broadcast at 7:30 it is obviously meant for family entertainment and if it gets just a few youngsters in particular interested in our industrial heritage and engineering then that's all right by me.
John |
Ian S C | 17/03/2011 13:41:38 |
![]() 7468 forum posts 230 photos | I think it was one of my school teachers who said that soon we would be using the imperial micrometers foe G-clamps, because they would be usless once we changed to metric. "Fraid we don't see these programs on this side of the rock. Ian S C |
John Stevenson | 17/03/2011 13:56:03 |
![]() 5068 forum posts 3 photos | Anyone spot where when the clock was screwed to the wall, about 29 minutes on I player, he split the case ? |
Steve Garnett | 17/03/2011 17:12:46 |
837 forum posts 27 photos | Yup, agree entirely with all the above - plus, he's going to ruin that mattress, putting it directly onto a sheet of shuttering ply with no holes in it. It will be soaking wet in no time at all! This series is a very good example of what's wrong with our current mainstream TV output. If you have access to channels like Discovery Shed (yes, really!), things improve a bit. Also I was quite impressed with Robert Llewellyn's "How do they do it" series - much better made, and far more informative. |
Terryd | 17/03/2011 23:01:00 |
![]() 1946 forum posts 179 photos | Posted by Steve Garnett on 17/03/2011 17:12:46: Yup, agree entirely with all the above - plus, he's going to ruin that mattress, putting it directly onto a sheet of shuttering ply with no holes in it. It will be soaking wet in no time at all! This series is a very good example of what's wrong with our current mainstream TV output. If you have access to channels like Discovery Shed (yes, really!), things improve a bit. Also I was quite impressed with Robert Llewellyn's "How do they do it" series - much better made, and far more informative. Hi Steve, I agree wholly with all you said. The problem is that many of these shows are dumbed down because some producer thinks that the majority of the British public aren't interested in detail and quality. Good examples were those makeover shows that were once so popular, where so called 'Designers' tried to be as outlandish as possible with other peoples homes, while using acres of mdf and gallons of primary coloured paints. Those weren't designers they were more like Art School dropouts who thought they could design. Your comment about the mattress reminds of when I built my children's bunk beds many years ago and made the mattress base out of 10mm ply. I spent happy hours with a semi blunt Eclipse holesaw making what seemed like hundreds of holes to ensure ventilation. Happy days (?) ![]() Best regards Terry |
Eric Cox | 18/03/2011 08:51:59 |
![]() 557 forum posts 38 photos | Going back to the "G" clamp, micrometers when locked to the correct size make excellent snap gauges. Verniers can be used as finely adjustable spanners and 24 and 36 inch verniers are useful as sash clamps when making picture frames. By the way Robert Llewellyn's "How do they do it" is American with him doing the voice over. The original version is sometimes shown on "Quest" Edited By Eric Cox on 18/03/2011 08:52:44 Edited By Eric Cox on 18/03/2011 09:02:17 |
modeng2000 | 18/03/2011 12:34:04 |
340 forum posts 1 photos | 'By the way Robert Llewellyn's "How do they do it" is American with him doing the voice over.' That is interesting, I saw a Warco machine in the workshop in one of the programmes. John |
John Stevenson | 18/03/2011 13:00:08 |
![]() 5068 forum posts 3 photos | Damn things get everywhere :D John S. |
Steve Garnett | 18/03/2011 13:04:35 |
837 forum posts 27 photos | Posted by Eric Cox on 18/03/2011 08:51:59: By the way Robert Llewellyn's "How do they do it" is American with him doing the voice over. I wouldn't regard that as a problem, particularly, or even a significant issue. Back in the good old days, American TV was generally regarded as pretty poor, overall, and the UK output was rather better - and held up as a model for the Americans to aspire to, and in a lot of cases, it worked. And then Auntie Beeb got more concerned with social do-gooding (like what's happening today) than operating the Reithian model, and all the standards dropped. This largely coincided with the arrival of management-speak in the form of Birtism... But the other significant factor in who makes what is, of course, that the majority of serious programming is based on international co-production these days, and often voice-overs are added for different markets anyway - it doesn't neccessarily mean that it was an 'American' production at all. The reason for the co-production of course is cost-based; with most broadcasters now running management-heavy operations and also having to cope with advertisers who don't generally like 'factual' material around their adverts, the only way to make these programs is to spread the cost/risk. Edited By Steve Garnett on 18/03/2011 13:05:38 |
KWIL | 18/03/2011 13:12:32 |
3681 forum posts 70 photos | Not USA but Canada (Wikipedia) |
chris stephens | 18/03/2011 14:16:16 |
1049 forum posts 1 photos | Hi Guys,
I think the way to tell where it comes from is that if Kryton is doing a voice over it is foreign and if he actually appears in the film it is an English part.
chriStephens
PS do you hear a funny whirring noise when listening to Auntie Beeb, that's Lord Reith spinning in his grave.
|
Mike | 18/03/2011 16:44:16 |
![]() 713 forum posts 6 photos | When "The boat that Guy Built" series first started, I asked my wife to record all the episodes for me. I have now asked her to erase them. I find the programme dumbed down and amateurish - an insult to engineers both professional and amateur. There does seem to be a certain element within the BBC with a philosophy of "if you don't understand a subject, take the mickey out of it." |
Andrew Johnston | 18/03/2011 18:40:41 |
![]() 7061 forum posts 719 photos | Posted by Mike on 18/03/2011 16:44:16: When "The boat that Guy Built" series first started, I asked my wife to record all the episodes for me. I have now asked her to erase them. I find the programme dumbed down and amateurish - an insult to engineers both professional and amateur. There does seem to be a certain element within the BBC with a philosophy of "if you don't understand a subject, take the mickey out of it." It's worse than that; it only seems to apply to engineering, and to some extent science. I don't suppose that everybody in the BBC speaks German, but can you imagine them taking the mickey out of the Ring Cycle because they don't understand the language? Regards, Andrew |
blowlamp | 18/03/2011 19:37:54 |
![]() 1885 forum posts 111 photos | There also seems to be a belief with many of the programme makers that if we're not singing, dancing, or laughing, then we can't be having fun or enjoying ourselves.
I've also noticed the 'fear' of the producers of anyone having a meaty chat about things mechanical as it's always done in a jokey way, as if it's too painful for the viewer otherwise.
It is interesting to see how they're trying to remind the population of our manufacturing past and I wonder if those in charge are hinting at what we should be doing now, with programmes like this, along with the very interesting documentory Britain At Work, which is presented quite nicely by Kirsty Young. After all, now it's so expensive to buy a degree, many school leavers may need to go back into manufacturing whatever we can.
Martin. |
chris stephens | 18/03/2011 20:27:18 |
1049 forum posts 1 photos | Hi Guys,
Surely the problem is that the BBC saw how popular Fred Dibnah was and thought "let's make a similar sort of program but make it suitable for everyone", thus taking away detail for those who know something about the subject and stopping those who don't from getting bored.
chriStephens
|
Terryd | 18/03/2011 22:54:45 |
![]() 1946 forum posts 179 photos | Hi Graham, The 'no conkers' rule was enacted by misguided heads of few small primary schools down south. The other 4700 or so schools carried on as normal. Quote: "Top Gear, along with other media commentators, mistakenly stated that the wearing of goggles during the game was due to an official Health and Safety Executive (HSE) edict when it was in fact an initiative which the schools themselves had put in place independently" (Wikipedia) . I.e. not an official policy, no 'Elfin safety' there then!. As far as teaching is concerned, teachers now are now more or less only able to teach what the National Curriculum allows and that was enacted by the vapid industry hater one M. Thatcher in the late 1980's and is now having such a consequence. We were told in no uncertain terms that these industrial skills were those of the past and the new skills needed were those of the service industries, one of those being the hugely influential pop music and media industries. Graham, please enlighten us as to where this Lady GaGa course is to be held, or is it another Daily Mail scare story? BTW n the same way Thatcher's decision to scrap school meals, balanced as they were, to be replaced by those that the children (read 'consumer') wanted to buy, led in large part to the burger and chips culture and obesity problem we now have to deal with at enormous cost. (in anticipation of Jamie Oliver, in 1986 I predicted to anyone who would listen that we would have an obesity epidemic in 25 to 30 years.) Best regards Terry Best regards |
Steve Garnett | 18/03/2011 22:56:49 |
837 forum posts 27 photos | Posted by KWIL on 18/03/2011 13:12:32: Not USA but Canada (Wikipedia) I'm afraid not... Everything I said about American TV is true, and Canada (because it has a very strong government-supported film tradition) has always done better anyway, but 'How Do They Do It?' is actually made by an independent UK company for Discovery (which is probably why you see Warco lathes, etc), and they are London-based Wag TV. It actually says this in the first line of the Wiki page if you look... But, I don't think that the BBC is intellectually capable of making programs like that any more. |
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