- Joined
- Feb 9, 2017
- Messages
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I'm still new to all the different aspects of machining, especially metrology. So Mike antique set of blocks made me dive the rabbit hole and when I searched "fractional gauge blocks" this came up: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4654600/
Basically laying out how gauge blocks are old "zombie technology". Many things were mention including wringing. Although I'd heard it mentioned like when Mr.Pete put together a stack for making precision angles for a sine gauge it was taken for granted and I never looked further. In the zombie tech article it makes it pretty clear that the ability to wring is crucial to proper use of gage blocks which of course I didn't know. I also didn't know that wringing isn't completely understood as I just assumed it was like vacuum developing between two flat surfaces but it still works in a vacuum!
I've toyed several times with buying a set of blocks for checking and measuring but was always stuck between buying old name sets that were often in not that great of shape and missing blocks for 4x's what a new set from Shars would cost. But after that article I can see it would have been a blunder as corroded blocks won't wring.
This is not to demean your score Mike as it's useful art, it is sharing what your survey has led me to in further understanding.
Basically laying out how gauge blocks are old "zombie technology". Many things were mention including wringing. Although I'd heard it mentioned like when Mr.Pete put together a stack for making precision angles for a sine gauge it was taken for granted and I never looked further. In the zombie tech article it makes it pretty clear that the ability to wring is crucial to proper use of gage blocks which of course I didn't know. I also didn't know that wringing isn't completely understood as I just assumed it was like vacuum developing between two flat surfaces but it still works in a vacuum!
I've toyed several times with buying a set of blocks for checking and measuring but was always stuck between buying old name sets that were often in not that great of shape and missing blocks for 4x's what a new set from Shars would cost. But after that article I can see it would have been a blunder as corroded blocks won't wring.
This is not to demean your score Mike as it's useful art, it is sharing what your survey has led me to in further understanding.