Basic Benchwork

£7.95

Model engineers and amateur metalworkers need to learn the tricks and handwork which experienced engineers take for granted. This book details normal bench practice suitable for engineering apprentices which will save spoiled work and tools.

ISBN: 978 085242 920 4
Category:
Author: Les Oldridge

Description

A considerable amount of engineering work takes place on the bench, using hand tools and techniques which are second nature to those who earn their living in an engineering environment; they probably learned at a technical college, as an apprentice, or possibly by the example of older and more experienced workmates.

The amateur or hobbyist engineer may not have enjoyed such advantages and, for example, may break a lot of hacksaw blades because he has not been shown how to use the saw or what sort of blades he should be using. This book sets out to cover all the normal bench processes in a simple but informative manner which should help all who have come to enjoy working with metals but whose education did not include a grounding in the basics of engineering benchwork.

Contents: Materials; Reading Engineering Drawings; Hacksaws; Files and Filing; Hammers, Chisels and Punches; Scrapers and Scraping; Measuring; Marking Out; Drills and Reamers; Screwed Fastenings, Spanners, Screwdrivers and Pliers; Taps and Dies; Riveting; Soft Soldering; Silver Soldering, Brazing, Bronze Welding and Engineering Adhesives; Welding; Hardening and Tempering Tools; Keys, Keyways, Splines, Collars and Shafts; Sheet Metalwork.

Originally published in 1988 by Argus Books Ltd
Nexus Special Interests edition published 1995
Special Interest Model Books edition published 2013

Specification:
210 x 148 mm
128 pages
42 black & white photographs
119 plans & scale drawings
14 tables of data
Index
paperback