01-17-2017, 05:34 PM
(This post was last modified: 01-17-2017, 05:37 PM by tablesawtom.)
How many of you use either a dial or a digital caliper? This is also in response to an earlier post about a oneway gig.
I worked in decimals all of my life so it is second nature but I am sure some of you convert using either a conversion chart or a calculator. I was asked by my 11 year old grandson about diameters and fraction last week He said he hadn't had any of it in school yet. So I hope this helps at least one person.
So my first question is how many pennies are there in a 1/2 dollar. The answer is 50 and if a person was adding or subtracting one would right is as .50. if one was reading a dial indicator in thousandths or a dial or digital caliper it would read .50 and add a zero or .500.
Second question how many pennies in a quarter answer 25 and add a zero or .250
If you are using a digital caliper to measure a piece of wood just out of a planner and it is supposed to be 3/4 of an inch then it is 25 cents, 25cents equals 50 cents and 25 cents equals 75 cents. And add a zero or .750 I hope it is using what you have known all your life in a different way because you do this kind of math in you head every day.
!/8 and 1/8 equal a quarter and 1/2 of 25 cents is 12and 1/2 cents or .125. so 3/8 inch is .12 plus .25 or .37 and add the .005 or .375. And 5/8 inch is 1//2( 50) plus 1/ 8 ( 120 or 620 and add the .005 or 625. Again a head job with a little practice.
1/16 is 1/2 of 1/8 or .062 because 1/8 is .125.
1/32 is .0312 Don't worry about the .0002 and rounded off is .03
and 1/64 is .0156 don't worry about the .0006.
lets say you have a beading bit in a router table and you roughed the radius in and you now have a round over. The depth of the cut left is 1/16 inch. Now here is where I part company with several here on the form I go with accuracy and the general thought train is it is only wood. I would use the gage pictured and raise the cutter .062
You can say that that kind of accuracy isn't needed but down the road lets say that it is 1/2 of a drop leaf joint. If the thickness of the wood .75 and the radii starts 1 /16 down from the top then if I use my gage and set the top of the cove bit at .625 above the top of the router table then the tops will match because the top surfaces Datum of the wood first cut was cut referencing off the datum of the router table (top) If different thicknesses then it is just a math problem when setting the cove bit.
If I cut the first joint the way I do, then I can come back a month latter, and cut the other half if the joint and the tops will match. Yes I know wood expansion can come into play but in the 1/16 it is so little it won/'t inter into the equation.
It is using fractions, dismals and such to produce a nice piece of work. If what I wrote make any sense to you, just imagine the possibilities.
Tom
imagine
I worked in decimals all of my life so it is second nature but I am sure some of you convert using either a conversion chart or a calculator. I was asked by my 11 year old grandson about diameters and fraction last week He said he hadn't had any of it in school yet. So I hope this helps at least one person.
So my first question is how many pennies are there in a 1/2 dollar. The answer is 50 and if a person was adding or subtracting one would right is as .50. if one was reading a dial indicator in thousandths or a dial or digital caliper it would read .50 and add a zero or .500.
Second question how many pennies in a quarter answer 25 and add a zero or .250
If you are using a digital caliper to measure a piece of wood just out of a planner and it is supposed to be 3/4 of an inch then it is 25 cents, 25cents equals 50 cents and 25 cents equals 75 cents. And add a zero or .750 I hope it is using what you have known all your life in a different way because you do this kind of math in you head every day.
!/8 and 1/8 equal a quarter and 1/2 of 25 cents is 12and 1/2 cents or .125. so 3/8 inch is .12 plus .25 or .37 and add the .005 or .375. And 5/8 inch is 1//2( 50) plus 1/ 8 ( 120 or 620 and add the .005 or 625. Again a head job with a little practice.
1/16 is 1/2 of 1/8 or .062 because 1/8 is .125.
1/32 is .0312 Don't worry about the .0002 and rounded off is .03
and 1/64 is .0156 don't worry about the .0006.
lets say you have a beading bit in a router table and you roughed the radius in and you now have a round over. The depth of the cut left is 1/16 inch. Now here is where I part company with several here on the form I go with accuracy and the general thought train is it is only wood. I would use the gage pictured and raise the cutter .062
You can say that that kind of accuracy isn't needed but down the road lets say that it is 1/2 of a drop leaf joint. If the thickness of the wood .75 and the radii starts 1 /16 down from the top then if I use my gage and set the top of the cove bit at .625 above the top of the router table then the tops will match because the top surfaces Datum of the wood first cut was cut referencing off the datum of the router table (top) If different thicknesses then it is just a math problem when setting the cove bit.
If I cut the first joint the way I do, then I can come back a month latter, and cut the other half if the joint and the tops will match. Yes I know wood expansion can come into play but in the 1/16 it is so little it won/'t inter into the equation.
It is using fractions, dismals and such to produce a nice piece of work. If what I wrote make any sense to you, just imagine the possibilities.
Tom
imagine