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Bill[_47_] Bill[_47_] is offline
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Default How does the word "spline" mean curved (and why not just usethe word curved)?

Bill wrote:
David Howard wrote:
Garrett Wollman wrote, on Mon, 06 Oct 2014 04:50:01 +0000:

In woodworking, a spline is a long (and perforce rigid) bar of material
used to join two grooved work pieces (essentially acting as a two-sided
"tongue"), running cross-grain and providing greater strength than a
simple butt joint by greatly increasing glue surface area. I suspect
the same sense exists in metalworking as well.

With that as a starting point, I find the woodworking use of "spline"
here.
http://www.woodworkersjournal.com/re...tsWithSplines/


I wonder if the woodworkers know that a "spline" means a curved line?
http://autocadtips.files.wordpress.c...ader.jpg?w=640
http://help.autodesk.com/cloudhelp/2...886CB2A345.png



I didn't read everything above.. but maybe the use of spline by
woodworkers is more closely related to the "splint"--like you would
use on a broken finger.



How about this--to "spline", to smooth or set straight. Everybody
happy? ; )

Bill