As of last night I was pretty much sure that
the pegs were firmly fixed. The problem this morning was
how I was going to make a hollow concave.
I looked around in my workshop. A few different bits came
to my mind. Problem is you never know until
you have done it.
My guestimate turned out to be right, though...
Take a look at this image below.
A hollow concave is there!
I placed an egg over it. Fitting is not yet exactly right,
but that can be fixed later as I please.
Above is showing you the bit, the sanding bit I used.
Its diam. is something like that that of an egg.
I opted for sanding, because I could not think of
any other options... I will come on to that.
Incidentally, the bit at the front is one I use for
making concaves with pretty much everything, including
spoons and bean curd mixers.
Above schematics showing you part of my lines o thought.
I did not want A, because pegs are already
discontinuities, like quantum steps. Of course,
you cannot help it as they are dispersed.
To secure some resemblance to continuity in kind means
you want the top of each peg following the imaginary
curvature in space, as shown with B.
The sanding bit I used was ideal for this. Time?
Surprisingly small, just 5 minutes? I am guessing that
the whole assembly can be completed in 20 minutes,
that is apart from coating, and I do not take my
coating time and cost into the eventual selling price.
This egg thing, I am sure, will fetch a minimum of JPY
1,000 a piece. Why? It is the quality of my coating and
the material used in addition to my care throughout...
I did other things too, forc-kives above.
Above? Renwed attempt at the beans mixer. Two assemblies
are now drying in my computer room, for tommorrow.
These, too. Bean curd beaters and some contact free
dinosaurs. When the beasts reach 50, or thereabout
I will start coating of the current lot.
After that?, it is all Merry Christmas and I might have a short spell of doing nothing...
After all that, it is the new year's festivities.
I might deserve something unusual...
the pegs were firmly fixed. The problem this morning was
how I was going to make a hollow concave.
I looked around in my workshop. A few different bits came
to my mind. Problem is you never know until
you have done it.
My guestimate turned out to be right, though...
Take a look at this image below.
A hollow concave is there!
I placed an egg over it. Fitting is not yet exactly right,
but that can be fixed later as I please.
Above is showing you the bit, the sanding bit I used.
Its diam. is something like that that of an egg.
I opted for sanding, because I could not think of
any other options... I will come on to that.
Incidentally, the bit at the front is one I use for
making concaves with pretty much everything, including
spoons and bean curd mixers.
Above schematics showing you part of my lines o thought.
I did not want A, because pegs are already
discontinuities, like quantum steps. Of course,
you cannot help it as they are dispersed.
To secure some resemblance to continuity in kind means
you want the top of each peg following the imaginary
curvature in space, as shown with B.
The sanding bit I used was ideal for this. Time?
Surprisingly small, just 5 minutes? I am guessing that
the whole assembly can be completed in 20 minutes,
that is apart from coating, and I do not take my
coating time and cost into the eventual selling price.
This egg thing, I am sure, will fetch a minimum of JPY
1,000 a piece. Why? It is the quality of my coating and
the material used in addition to my care throughout...
I did other things too, forc-kives above.
Above? Renwed attempt at the beans mixer. Two assemblies
are now drying in my computer room, for tommorrow.
These, too. Bean curd beaters and some contact free
dinosaurs. When the beasts reach 50, or thereabout
I will start coating of the current lot.
After that?, it is all Merry Christmas and I might have a short spell of doing nothing...
After all that, it is the new year's festivities.
I might deserve something unusual...