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Width, Length and other Ambiguities
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Larry Jaques[_2_]
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Width, Length and other Ambiguities
On Wed, 24 Mar 2010 21:04:19 -0500, the infamous
(Robert Bonomi) scrawled the following:
In article ,
Max wrote:
"Chris Friesen" wrote in message
news
On 03/24/2010 11:18 AM,
wrote:
Let's say you have a board that is 1" thick, 3" wide, 6" long.
The "ends" are where the grain shears off.
The "edges" are the thinner sides.
The "faces" are the wider sides.
But if I were to rip a thin strip off ...say 1/2" wide, so that the
smaller
"board" is 1 x 1/2 x 6...have the "edges" and "faces" changed places?
Is the "edge" still the thinner (1/2") side?
Personally I'd say yes. The edge should be the thinnest side that shows
long grain.
Of course it gets tricky if you have pieces with a square cross-section.
Incidentally, for cabinetmaking plywood the second dimension is the
grain direction. So an 8x4 sheet has the grain going the short way.
Chris
Lowe's has some 4X4 sheets.
What is one to do?
Lay her down, roll her over, and do it again?
Do what a purported disconnected number recording at MIT once advised:
"The number you have called is imaginary,
Please rotate your phone 90 degrees, and try again."
I like it! I wonder how many people actually tried that. g
--
If we attend continually and promptly to the little that we can do, we
shall ere long be surprised to find how little remains that we cannot do.
-- Samuel Butler
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