Sujet : Re: 3/8" drill chuck replacement
De : muratlanne (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Jim Wilkins)
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworkingDate : 11. Apr 2025, 17:35:38
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vtbgda$23103$1@dont-email.me>
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BP wrote in message
news:vtb8qp$1pkas$1@dont-email.me...I don't think it'll be a problem to get the right key. I just wasn't
paying enough attention. In fact, "hobby store brass tubing" will be
considerably harder to find, at least around here.
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I'm seeing that too, all techie DIY stuff that requires manual skills is disappearing.
In the 1950's PopSci and PM carried projects "for the man who can weld" or owns a lathe. They faded away in the 60's.
"Boys' Life" had scalable patterns for a paper hot air balloon, which I built. The "UFO" in the Exeter Incident seems to me very much like one. Paper hot air balloons carrying enough fuel to first inflate them were initially too heavy to rise like a Helium balloon and tended to stay low and move randomly in ground turbulence. Road flares were a source of powder that burned bright red as the falling fuel level exposed it, lighting up the whole envelope like a Japanese lantern. Rocking back and forth and rising as they lighten are typical of model hot air balloons.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exeter_incidentTestimony from the Titanic inquiry shows how much eyewitness accounts can vary from each other and what the evidence shows happened. Sci fi movie effects show how easily the size of and distance to unfamiliar objects can be misjudged.
The Physics professor from Phillips Exeter Academy lived nearby and build toy gizmos, and my guess is some students were trying to impress him.