goldstar31
Well-Known Member
I guess that I am much older than most but amongst other things, that I am quite clear about the origins of things like the Deckel and its later derivatives. It may NOT agree with other concepts but
I can go back to the original Deckel which was NOT a so called universal cutter grinder but a tool for nothing more than grinding SINGLE LIPPED ENGRAVING blanks. Nothing more and the odd collet to do the holding.
I tried to buy one at the local college where tool grinding was carried out on "Mark 1 Clarkson' on which the Blackgates Stent was based- first as a short bed then later as a long bed.
I have an all welded one- so there.
At that time there was NO homworkshop milling machine es until Ned Westbury brought out his mill/drill- which I built mainly from poor college castings but a headstock which came from Precision Models- under the Forth Road Bridge--- where my very fancy castings for the exotic Potts products were obtained. No argument I still have most. PM went to Hemingwaykits and I believe that they hold rather more tooling than they advertise! They hold the Quorn castings etc originally from Model Engineering Services with Ivan Law as proprietor, Mr Law was associated with Arnold Throp pf Dore Engineering and there was the Kennet which is the forerunner of the Worden. Again, I have BOTH.
So the Quorn came from D H Chaddock who was the Principal of Loughborough College who lived in a little town called Quorn. Obviously because it ground corn into flour. Me on the Hebrides and Orkney-- there was a millstone in one of the family weekend cottages near to Rumbling Quern on the Nortumberland coast.
Chaddock seems to have taken the college Deckel home and extensively modified it. He was building a V6 engine and the Deckel was quite unable to make the 1/10 th diameter home made milling cutters -- to do the fins. DHC could make the cutters- but not sharpen them.
By 1973 or so, the Mark one Quorn was doing all sorts of things that today's Deckel clone cannot do. I have one.
I have no idea when the Stent originated but the now Canadian ;Tinker' was being developed--- just about next door to the Late John StevenMBE abode. I guess that BaronJ has a set of original castings! Just a guess.
So that is more or less the history with. the Quorn in a 3rd version and still being developed.
I have a Mark 1 and a kit for the Mark3.
I also have a set of plans for the original Brookes- I think.
Hopefully this will go someway to clear up misconceptions which have arisen.
I can go back to the original Deckel which was NOT a so called universal cutter grinder but a tool for nothing more than grinding SINGLE LIPPED ENGRAVING blanks. Nothing more and the odd collet to do the holding.
I tried to buy one at the local college where tool grinding was carried out on "Mark 1 Clarkson' on which the Blackgates Stent was based- first as a short bed then later as a long bed.
I have an all welded one- so there.
At that time there was NO homworkshop milling machine es until Ned Westbury brought out his mill/drill- which I built mainly from poor college castings but a headstock which came from Precision Models- under the Forth Road Bridge--- where my very fancy castings for the exotic Potts products were obtained. No argument I still have most. PM went to Hemingwaykits and I believe that they hold rather more tooling than they advertise! They hold the Quorn castings etc originally from Model Engineering Services with Ivan Law as proprietor, Mr Law was associated with Arnold Throp pf Dore Engineering and there was the Kennet which is the forerunner of the Worden. Again, I have BOTH.
So the Quorn came from D H Chaddock who was the Principal of Loughborough College who lived in a little town called Quorn. Obviously because it ground corn into flour. Me on the Hebrides and Orkney-- there was a millstone in one of the family weekend cottages near to Rumbling Quern on the Nortumberland coast.
Chaddock seems to have taken the college Deckel home and extensively modified it. He was building a V6 engine and the Deckel was quite unable to make the 1/10 th diameter home made milling cutters -- to do the fins. DHC could make the cutters- but not sharpen them.
By 1973 or so, the Mark one Quorn was doing all sorts of things that today's Deckel clone cannot do. I have one.
I have no idea when the Stent originated but the now Canadian ;Tinker' was being developed--- just about next door to the Late John StevenMBE abode. I guess that BaronJ has a set of original castings! Just a guess.
So that is more or less the history with. the Quorn in a 3rd version and still being developed.
I have a Mark 1 and a kit for the Mark3.
I also have a set of plans for the original Brookes- I think.
Hopefully this will go someway to clear up misconceptions which have arisen.