A rhetorical question
On Sep 15, 7:53*am, "Lloyd E. Sponenburgh"
lloydspinsidemindspring.com wrote:
I have a casual acquaintance who I respect for one of his areas of
expertice. *Besides that knowlege, he claims to have been "a machinist
for decades". *He's of retirement age now.
Recently, he instructed a raw-beginner HSM on how to turn long tapers
using the compound and frequent re-chucking, and using a file for
dressing up the jaggies. *When I suggested turning between centers and
offsetting the tailstock, he bristled, saying that it was
"impossible" to ever get the tailstock back on center again.
Later he made a comment to another fellow allowing that "owning a
lathe and a mill would only be a dream for me."
Can I presume this guy is NOT "a machinist"? G
Or is it possible that production-floor machine _operators_ call
themselves that?
LLoyd
I never owned a lathe till this year. It's a Chinese one and I'm the
first one to put the tailstock on center. I'm pretty sure I'm not a
machinist.
Karl
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