Subject: | [Shop-talk] Identifying taper and threading attachments on a |
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From: | jszwed at energykinetics.com (Joe Szwed) |
Date: | Thu, 20 Oct 2011 11:42:53 -0400 |
References: | <mailman.18.1318960808.11683.shop-talk@autox.team.net> <1B9FB4B4C85C43988CF6533A293A8F6D@EnergyKinetics.EKnet> <65884CFF6F01482B99CD50CD5947BC69@HP62011> <7520E99DCA554F72827DAE1E259B3768@EnergyKinetics.EKnet> <B8677E2507954B69BD9E4BD02B86E23F@HP62011> <4E9F8126.3000707@frontier.com> <0EF076AD4A5E4765BFE52E0315D6D24C@HP62011> |
Arvid, Sorry for any confusion. In my original post I was just trying to point out that with using today's cnc equipment, it was faster for the shop to make a new part than fix the first one. With non-cnc equip, it would have been faster to fix the first part. Joe -----Original Message----- I totally agree, it can be done. I think the original post was "they just chucked a new piece in and cut new threads" and my intent was to suggest why it would might be quicker to just start over. Arvid |
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