Showing posts with label Learn to be a machinist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Learn to be a machinist. Show all posts

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Sharpen Your Knife - Machinist School How to

Here at the Machinist School, we engage in the education and technology involved with the instruction for those who want to learn or sharpen their skills in the field of stones for creating edges that cut.
There's not much magic .... it's a matter of doing it.
There are a number of tools and techniques that are "the ultimate".

In olden times, people rubbed their knife on a rock to create a sharp edge.
Then as time went on technology didn't change much but they changed from using a rock to using a stone.
When things got industrialized, some people specialized in the business of stones-for-sharpening-knives. People that had been stone masons figured out that building stone walls was a lot of work for not very much money. Some of them discovered the concept of jewelry and gemstones. Others discovered the sharpening stone. Either way, the rock became valuable as an individual item of trade rather than simply part of a wall.

Stones-for-sharpening-knives was too much to say in one breath so the search for a better name ensued. Though lots of explanations exist, what we know is that the word "HONE" emerged. Nobody was sure if HONE was a noun or verb. Was the rock a hone or was the process of using a rock "to hone"? Some folks call the rock a hone. Others say it is a hone stone. When used around the house, it is a home hone stone. When used at homes of little people, it is a gnome home hone stone. In certain parts of Italy it is a Rome gnome home hone stone. When an Italian woman throws it at you it is a Rome gnome home hone stone thrown ........... you get the idea, I suppose.
Anyway, manufacturers of hone stones try to differentiate their rocks from other rocks with pamphlets on "How to Care for Your Hone Stone" ........... well, duh ......... how do you take care of a rock?????????????????????????
Anyway, your knife will eventually get sharper if you rub it on a hone stone. It is cutting edge technology.

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Educational Career Training School

Some folks go to machinist school for career training. Other folks go to machinist school because they like to make things. Sometimes women go to machinist school because the trade is male dominated. (Either they want to meet guys or to show folks they can do what the guys do.) Other people go to machinist school because their parents say "Either move out or go to school." (They figure machinist school is an easier or more fun education than accounting.)
At least once, a hispanic political activist went to machinist school in hopes of finding discrimination against hispanics. (Instead he learned a trade!) Others go to machinist school because of a free opportunity - they got a scholarship, they got laid off at work and the unemployment office is sending them to school, they are in some kind of disadvantaged (disabled, minority, etc) status that receives educational benefits, or maybe they are using veterans educational benefits. Another group is the offspring of machinists, going to school to follow the trade of their ancestors. If you want to learn to be a machinist (person that makes things using machine tools) you might go to a machinist school.

Sunday, November 9, 2008

The Heart of the Machinist School

Here's a link to Grit In the Gears ......
He's got a twisted heart.
See it live ..... (pronounced with a long I or short i?) ....

http://gritinthegears.blogspot.com/2008/11/heart-gears.html

While people say, "To be a machinist, your heart has to be in it," in truth, it is considered good practice to keep organs and body parts out of the machinery.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Machinist School Textbook

To download a great machinist school text about forging and the engine lathe see the following link:

http://books.google.com/books?id=iD5IAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA193&lpg=PA193&dq=lathe+cross+slide+thread+stop&source=web&ots=OBgpj8JkSs&sig=S95bUOsIZ8x3sHWSFRGnPoVcPcQ&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=7&ct=result#PPP1,M1

Machine Tool Operation - Part I - The Lathe Bench Work and Work at the Forge by Henry D. Burghardt is a 1919 text whose copyright has expired and is now available as a free digitized download from Google.

Maybe this IS planet Earth ..... maybe we ARE all in this together .... maybe sharing knowledge IS OK .....