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| Thread ID: 122574 | 2011-12-31 11:13:00 | Screw adjustment fitting thingy. | pine-o-cleen (2955) | PC World Chat |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1251464 | 2012-01-02 08:05:00 | www.google.com Might give you some hints/tricks (if you haven't already tried this) |
Myth (110) | ||
| 1251465 | 2012-01-03 01:03:00 | www.google.com Might give you some hints/tricks (if you haven't already tried this) I have already tried that, in fact, already visited the first 10 links :D |
pine-o-cleen (2955) | ||
| 1251466 | 2012-01-03 01:04:00 | your youtube link presented many options :( :( They are pretty much all videos about the same thing. I'm not making any one of those specifically, just designing my own cnc router. |
pine-o-cleen (2955) | ||
| 1251467 | 2012-01-03 01:17:00 | Follow the plot :) Why would you want Snort to go contrary to his nature? |
Cicero (40) | ||
| 1251468 | 2012-01-03 02:19:00 | For a name, uploaded your image to Google images. Yields these results. (www.google.co.nz). Search Google patents (www.google.com) to see if similar have been designed. But then probably need alternative names for flange clamp: search for suggestions here. (http://ubersuggest.org/) (change drop down to english) Any info (e.g. specs, names, etc) on the original plans? I'm thinking something like this: www.fix8.co.uk But they don't go big enough. M24 = 24mm internal diameter right? |
kahawai chaser (3545) | ||
| 1251469 | 2012-01-03 03:20:00 | For NZ suppliers/manufacturers search like this, (www.google.co.nz R+steel+sleeve+OR+Collars&btnG=Search&oq=site%3A.co.nz+flange+clamp+OR+adjusting+collar+ OR+steel+sleeve+OR+Collars&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_sm=s&gs_upl=11211l11211l0l11882l1l1l0l0l0l0l0l0ll1l0) then for any pdf spec/products like this. (www.google.co.nz usting+collar+OR+steel+sleeve+OR+Collars&oq=site%3A.co.nz+filetype%3Apdf+flange+clamp+OR+ad justing+collar+OR+steel+sleeve+OR+Collars&aq=f&aqi=&aql=&gs_sm=e&gs_upl=113463l116667l0l116900l13l13l0l0l0l2l332l21 49l1.6.1.3l11l0) This yacht steering (www.deepblueyachtsupply.co.nz) company might have similar (or possibly) for what you want. | kahawai chaser (3545) | ||
| 1251470 | 2012-01-03 03:47:00 | We call it a "dead shaft support". There are a few versions, and the four screw is usually for a larger diameter shaft that is being turned on (for instance) a lathe or vertical end mill. Typically there are three on smaller shafts that are needed to be held and rotated inside the individual rubbing blocks. Or maybe it isn't. It could be for a Bris too. |
SurferJoe46 (51) | ||
| 1251471 | 2012-01-03 04:04:00 | Are your 'thingys' to support pipe slides, rotating shafts or threaded rod shafts? It could be that you are actually looking for bearings, not supports. | Richard (739) | ||
| 1251472 | 2012-01-03 04:09:00 | I was actually thinking marine orientated, where a lot of thrust/angled torque, e.g. like for submarine shafts (sure I seen in a movie - with Tony Curtis or Richard Widmark) or used in offshore oil rig, for a 4-bolt clamp. We call it a "dead shaft support". There are a few versions, and the four screw is usually for a larger diameter shaft that is being turned on (for instance) a lathe or vertical end mill. Typically there are three on smaller shafts that are needed to be held and rotated inside the individual rubbing blocks. Or maybe it isn't. It could be for a Bris too. |
kahawai chaser (3545) | ||
| 1251473 | 2012-01-03 04:22:00 | I suspect he is looking for widgets to align shafts used to guide and support the carriages in machinery. A more simple practice is to drill the end frames together with the carriage frames as a single operation on a well-clamped bundle. Leave the errors out and you don't have to correct them. Lucas had a different method. Sufficient error density enables chaos theory to cancel a fair few errors. ;) |
R2x1 (4628) | ||
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