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They are referred to as 'nut ruiner'. Dad's hoarding means we have multiple sets of the four main 'systems': B.A., Metric, AF and Whitworth. The latter we used to annoy people overseas by using it on exported vehicles!
The old German friend was a boilermaker/building fabricator. I said one day "If it can't be fixed with a hammer, you need a bigger hammer."Here they are known as "the last resort". It's the last thing you try or use before you start smashing things with a hammer. Those things were designed to ruin nuts.
The old German friend was a boilermaker/building fabricator. I said one day "If it can't be fixed with a hammer, you need a bigger hammer."
He said "Nah, if it can't be fixed with a hammer you use an axe." and pointed at the oxy acetelene setup.
This is exactly why many of my tools are old. The woodworking square I use is ancient with brass inserts in the wooden part. Engineering square-wise I use old Moore & Wright items probably from the sixties.I have owned two rulers with inches that were off by several percent. There was also the day I went to an old-fashioned hardware store with clerks bringing stuff to the counter, and asked for a try square. He brought a Stanley brand, considered one of the better ones. Expecting to admire it, I used it to square a piece of paper to the counter edge, and then flipped it over. It was about a degree out. The clerk just shrugged and put it back on the shelf.
That happened about fifty years ago. Most of my tools are carefully selected bargains. When I really want accuracy for setting a machine, I use draftsman's squares. Far better value per degree of error. I have a Stanley jack plane with the original price tag still stuck on it, for about $6.75. They just don't make stickers like they used to.This is exactly why many of my tools are old. The woodworking square I use is ancient with brass inserts in the wooden part. Engineering square-wise I use old Moore & Wright items probably from the sixties.
I've witnessed a few incidences like this myself. It's uplifting to see the looks of wonder and amazement on people's faces. For a lot of very remote communities in Australia the very first white people they saw had 4WD and two way radios, so a lot of these sorts of interactions happened.First sight of a laptop.