[ARC5] Some nonsense about drifts and the English language. (Was bearings for DM-28 dynamotors)
john rose
brokenthumb at live.com
Wed Nov 26 13:40:30 EST 2014
Thanks for bringing this up. In carpentry, and that was one of the basics Mr. Charns was teaching, it is a ‘nail set’. I defer to your definition in a machine shop.
From: Mike Hanz
Sent: Wednesday, November 26, 2014 1:20 PM
To: arc5, AKLDGUY .
Pin punch is U.S. convention, John, and has been for many years. I just
bought a new set of Starrett drive pin punches, and they have the same
name in my 1938 Starrett catalog. However, Commonwealth countries seem
to generally call it a pin drift. Same problem with a spanner versus a
wrench. Need to keep in mind the audience around here - they sometimes
get all bound up in nouns that mean the same thang. That's why I simply
called the "dynamotor pounding tool" a "1/4" brass rod..." :-) I *do*
like the term "podging tool", but its use might be limited to some
obscure corner of Liverpool or something...
Mike KC4TOS
On 11/26/2014 11:32 AM, joldenburg2 at new.rr.com wrote:
> The term for the proper tool in the application of removing a pin (or in this case a shaft from a bearing) form an assembly is a pin punch ( or sometimes simply a punch). A Drift or Drift Punch (also known as an alignment tool has a tapered shat on the business end so that it may be inserted into two misaligned holes and driven in to "drift the two items into alignment. Because of the tapper of the shaft damage could occur if it is over driven when used to remove a pin or shaft from an assembly. A punch has a strait shaft, and by using a punch of slightly smaller diameter than the pin it can be driven through with no damage to the assembly.
>
> Jon AB9AH
>
> BTW : Not hitter and hittee but driver and driven(???)
>
> ---- Leslie Smith <vk2bcu at operamail.com> wrote:
>
> Now, the 'thingy' used to separate the bearing and the shaft - is it a
> drift, a punch, a pin-driver or a podging tool? It's not the 'hit-ee',
> so it must be the 'hit-ter'.
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