- Joined
- Sep 21, 2012
- Messages
- 15
Greetings All
Well I haven't done this myself so...
I purchased just about all the various metalworking books Lindsay Publications put out, a sad loss to me when they closed-up.
The re-prints of older texts talk of generating surface plates, precision straight edges, and squares from scratch. They all use a three piece method. As I understand it, you get two to match fairly close and then take the third and match it to the others. You keep exchanging and comparing the three to each other, as you remove finer and finer discrepancies you will finally end up with a flat surface plate, matching straight edges and matching squares. The greater care you take, the finer the degree of agreement between the various items. In case it's not clear you do surface plate to surface plate, square to square, and straight edge to straight edge. I don't recall any of the of the old books stating this, but my thought is; if you did this with sufficient care then the straight edges and the limbs of the squares would also match each other and the surface plate also.
Matching shorter pieces of thread in a similar manner and then using that to generate a longer thread is the method that was used to make the first precision threads. Precision meaning that the threaded piece matched another threaded piece very closely.
all the best
Olin
Thanks. That seems to be the received wisdom. Those old timers were sure patient - a quality which is fast disappearing.