How to Stack Gage / Jo Blocks

Don Bailey demonstrates how to stack Gage Blocks.
www.subtool.com

Пікірлер: 33

  • @6minutemedia543
    @6minutemedia5439 жыл бұрын

    Love the back story. Someone who cares and shares, the enthusiasm is infectious. Many thanks.

  • @kgee2111
    @kgee21113 жыл бұрын

    Henry Ford’s personal set of Johansson gage blocks are on display at the Henry Ford museum in Dearborn MI. They are a beautiful piece of engineering.

  • @peterspence5196
    @peterspence51968 жыл бұрын

    I really love to hear about the history of some of the tools we use daily and take for granted. A toolmaker I worked with years ago told me about how the first lathe "leadscrew" came about. What came first the chicken or the egg? sort of thing. I had never thought about it until he told me. He said it was a hand chiseled round bar that was put into a machine to cut a better one. The better one was then used to cut a better one and so on until a smooth screw of a certain pitch was the result. If this is true the first one (which he said is in a museum) would be the "Holy Grail" of engineering to me. I don't know how close I am to the real story, but it sounds true. I love that sort of thing ... Nice education watching your videos Don, I wouldn't miss one..... Peter Spence.

  • @leonardpearlman4017

    @leonardpearlman4017

    5 жыл бұрын

    There's at least one book that goes into this in detail. It's a lot weirder than that, at the end there were a bunch of screws that were pretty close and used several at once to drive the lathe carriage, and then there was measurement of the error which was used to make a compensator that could change the pitch locally to make it more perfect. It's quite a story! I think it IS something that mechanically-minded people should know: How precision came out of nothing, how people started with stone tools and ended up with (say) gage blocks! Much of it happened in historical times, right? These are the legends of my people.

  • @nomanmcshmoo8640
    @nomanmcshmoo86408 жыл бұрын

    I use tons ( I almost mean that literally ) of Suburban stuff in my metrology lab. LOVE YOU GUYS!!!!

  • @SuburbanToolInc

    @SuburbanToolInc

    8 жыл бұрын

    +noman mcshmoo We appreciate your patronage. Thank you

  • @nomanmcshmoo8640

    @nomanmcshmoo8640

    8 жыл бұрын

    +SuburbanTool Inc The pleasure is all mine!!! Thank you for making such great products.

  • @resipsaloquitur13
    @resipsaloquitur134 жыл бұрын

    I appreciate you Sir. Just a bad time. Gonna follow up after class.

  • @manic4u2
    @manic4u24 жыл бұрын

    Here in the UK toolrooms that I worked in we always referred to them as 'Joey' blocks.

  • @SuburbanToolInc

    @SuburbanToolInc

    4 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for watching

  • @kjellcarlsson2947
    @kjellcarlsson29478 жыл бұрын

    C E Johansson invented a lot of smart stuff,among others the adjustable wrench. The first gageblocks were metric,and after a minute of head calculating he knew instantly he needed 102 blocks.I wonder who and how they were "translated" into inches? Love your videos about this and that.

  • @MPI1000

    @MPI1000

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Kjell Carlsson That's a different Johansson. :) J.P. Johansson (which became involved with Bahco). The conversion was easy in theory, as both systems used decimals. The big problem though, was that the inch wasn't a fixed measure! The U.K. and U.S. had ever so slightly different inches for instance, up until 1959. The U.S. inch between 1893-1959: 25.400051mm The U.K. inch pre-1959: 25.399917mm In 1959 they split the difference so to speak, so an inch is defined as 25.4mm exactly. Although in the industries they had already done that in the '30s.

  • @Conservator.

    @Conservator.

    5 жыл бұрын

    MPI1000 Thank you for sharing! And now that we have the who and how remains only one question: why? 😜

  • @leonardpearlman4017

    @leonardpearlman4017

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@MPI1000 My understanding is that Johansson talked the US government into this definition, and also was the one that came up with 20C as the international standard temp for measuring. Here that seems pretty chilly, but supposedly some Swedish metrologist remarked on how much fuel they had to burn to make it so warm in their lab!

  • @W0mpa
    @W0mpa8 жыл бұрын

    CEJ still makes calipers. They made alot of threading tools and calipers etc in the 1900s.

  • @MPI1000

    @MPI1000

    8 жыл бұрын

    +Thomas Wallblom CEJ does not exist as a company anymore as of last year in C.E. Johansson's (also my) home town of Eskilstuna. They used to make micrometers, calipers, microcators, et.c. all through the 1900's. In the 90's to 2000's their thing was 3D measuring stations. But it folded completely. :-/ The brand name is sold to some other company.

  • @Conservator.

    @Conservator.

    5 жыл бұрын

    MPI1000 Tx for sharing. Too bad they went down.

  • @anandhuvishnu6986
    @anandhuvishnu69869 жыл бұрын

    thank you very much sir

  • @BeReal918
    @BeReal9187 жыл бұрын

    FYI, the name Margarita was popularized by Queen Margherita of Savoy, Queen consort of Italy via her Marriage to Umberto I.

  • @SuburbanToolInc

    @SuburbanToolInc

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for sharing some knowledge.

  • @tobarapprentice6618
    @tobarapprentice66187 жыл бұрын

    Any chance you'd explain the use of the "digi check" height gage in the background?

  • @SuburbanToolInc

    @SuburbanToolInc

    7 жыл бұрын

    Possibly, we've made a note of it. Thanks for the suggestion!

  • @imduncanmajunkin
    @imduncanmajunkin9 жыл бұрын

    Who the hell is Glenn? I want his job :) love these videos

  • @dougankrum3328

    @dougankrum3328

    8 жыл бұрын

    Glenn...camera guy and Zig-Zag expert....

  • @edstud1
    @edstud12 жыл бұрын

    I'm just learning, what is 2 10ths? I love this area of learning.

  • @SuburbanToolInc

    @SuburbanToolInc

    2 жыл бұрын

    1.0" = 1 inch 0.100" = one hundred thousandths of an inch 0.010" = ten thousandths of an inch 0.001" = one thousandths of an inch 0.0001" = one ten thousandths of an inch (tenths, this is the measurement Don is referring to) Thank you for watching.

  • @alext9067
    @alext90677 жыл бұрын

    I know I'm not the sharpest hammer in the box, but I didn't understand anything after Margarita. And BTW, was she good looking? Do you have any slides?

  • @SuburbanToolInc

    @SuburbanToolInc

    7 жыл бұрын

    My lips are sealed :)

  • @leonardpearlman4017

    @leonardpearlman4017

    5 жыл бұрын

    She was strong! I don't know if we covered this in today's lesson, but the J family house/lab didn't have electricity!

  • @resipsaloquitur13
    @resipsaloquitur134 жыл бұрын

    Ok. I’m moving on. I have class and need to actually make something.

  • @sonicstep
    @sonicstep4 жыл бұрын

    06:08, Once you start using imperial measures, so many thousandths of an inch (25mm), I'm gone. It was all going well till that point. 😖

  • @resipsaloquitur13
    @resipsaloquitur134 жыл бұрын

    6min in a 9min vid, we get to the meat... I appreciate the history. But that wasn’t the purpose outlined in the description.

  • @charrontheboatman
    @charrontheboatman6 жыл бұрын

    I swear to all the tool gods DON you should open a machinists school there at suburban and reteach all the youngsters what is what...NONE of this is being taught in machine theory at all NONE.