dicktimber
Established Member
After reading various posts I think we should talk about what we ar trying to achieve with this wondrous material called wood.
We are being encouraged to buy machinery that claim to enable us to achieve lower and lower dimensional tolerances.
We have read about digital read outs that can be attached to planer thicknessers etc to achieve thicknesses down to tolerances within .00000000000000mm...you get the gist?
But have we lost the plot, in reality?
And is this the correct way for newcomers to be introduced to woodworking.?
Many of the retired metal work engineers who are on this forum understand that when working with metals, measurements on manufactured component drawings, have evolved as the base material has evolved. Limits and fits standards give precise tolerances for design engineers to adopt and translate into working drawings, letting them state tolerances for transition fits, sliding fits etc.
Engineers have milling machines to rough out while precision grinding allows them to reach minute tolerances.
When it come to woodworking, we seem to be trying more and more to assimilate metal working tolerances to woodworking.
Why?
The guide line for woodworking used to be 1/32"....30 thou.
This was because with a good steel rule and a keen eye, it was deemed the level most woodworkers could easily achieve.
So when someone decided to use a digital engineers vernier caliper for measuring thicknesses, overnight we thought we were building better parts. We could measure down to 0.000000!
And we did.
We added digital readouts, we put micro adjusters on outr router tables, and bragged that the buff told us we could machine surfaces to a tolerance of 0.0000000000!!!!!
Have we not been taken, hook, line and sinker, spending more and more on things that don't work with an unstable material, unlike metal?
If you do the job right and plane your stock rough first, bring it indoors and let it acclimatize for a while....they say you can work it and it, SHOULD remain stable?
Rough cut rails from the above stock, and let them stabilize for a week or so.
Machine up those rails, and then leave them for a while and sods law will say 2 out of 4 will be bent, to some extent.
And that is my point.
They will be more bent than the 0.0000000 digital thingie you took so much time to save up for, that you just machined these parts with.
But do we complain?
NO we just get on and use the parts........
which defeats using a digital do dah in the first place, and a good steel rule and the 1/32" I was taught would maybe have been just as good?
Are we in overkill on tolerances. I think we are because depending how much moisture is in the air, where the timber was cut from the tree, will not make a hapeth of difference to how you measured it.
I am sure Tom Chippie would have a good laugh if he could see us all today....don't you?
We are being encouraged to buy machinery that claim to enable us to achieve lower and lower dimensional tolerances.
We have read about digital read outs that can be attached to planer thicknessers etc to achieve thicknesses down to tolerances within .00000000000000mm...you get the gist?
But have we lost the plot, in reality?
And is this the correct way for newcomers to be introduced to woodworking.?
Many of the retired metal work engineers who are on this forum understand that when working with metals, measurements on manufactured component drawings, have evolved as the base material has evolved. Limits and fits standards give precise tolerances for design engineers to adopt and translate into working drawings, letting them state tolerances for transition fits, sliding fits etc.
Engineers have milling machines to rough out while precision grinding allows them to reach minute tolerances.
When it come to woodworking, we seem to be trying more and more to assimilate metal working tolerances to woodworking.
Why?
The guide line for woodworking used to be 1/32"....30 thou.
This was because with a good steel rule and a keen eye, it was deemed the level most woodworkers could easily achieve.
So when someone decided to use a digital engineers vernier caliper for measuring thicknesses, overnight we thought we were building better parts. We could measure down to 0.000000!
And we did.
We added digital readouts, we put micro adjusters on outr router tables, and bragged that the buff told us we could machine surfaces to a tolerance of 0.0000000000!!!!!
Have we not been taken, hook, line and sinker, spending more and more on things that don't work with an unstable material, unlike metal?
If you do the job right and plane your stock rough first, bring it indoors and let it acclimatize for a while....they say you can work it and it, SHOULD remain stable?
Rough cut rails from the above stock, and let them stabilize for a week or so.
Machine up those rails, and then leave them for a while and sods law will say 2 out of 4 will be bent, to some extent.
And that is my point.
They will be more bent than the 0.0000000 digital thingie you took so much time to save up for, that you just machined these parts with.
But do we complain?
NO we just get on and use the parts........
which defeats using a digital do dah in the first place, and a good steel rule and the 1/32" I was taught would maybe have been just as good?
Are we in overkill on tolerances. I think we are because depending how much moisture is in the air, where the timber was cut from the tree, will not make a hapeth of difference to how you measured it.
I am sure Tom Chippie would have a good laugh if he could see us all today....don't you?