Tim Wescott
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- Jun 3, 2018
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My understanding is that back in the Before Times, quite a while after it became unnecessary to do animal sacrifices to insure the fertility of your fields, but before you could order 3D printed parts over the Internet, machines were fastened together by tapping wedges into slots, rather than with screws.
Does anyone know of a history of machine building that really gets into this? When did it start? When did it end, and over how long a period? Are there any currently-produced machines that still use this? (Corollary -- don't single-tool tool posts use this?) The obvious advantage/disadvantage is you can make a nice wedge in a blacksmith's forge, but the amount of room it takes up for the fastening is huge compared to a tapped hole and a screw, or a screw and nut. Are there others?
Example use in an 1832 steam engine here:
Does anyone know of a history of machine building that really gets into this? When did it start? When did it end, and over how long a period? Are there any currently-produced machines that still use this? (Corollary -- don't single-tool tool posts use this?) The obvious advantage/disadvantage is you can make a nice wedge in a blacksmith's forge, but the amount of room it takes up for the fastening is huge compared to a tapped hole and a screw, or a screw and nut. Are there others?
Example use in an 1832 steam engine here: