The Breakroom > The Bookshelf

Audels Machinists and Toolmaker's Handy Book

<< < (2/2)

gmac:
My German made Faber-Castell slide rule sits right here on my desk - a reminder of how shocked I was at what it cost in 1971 when I started taking aeronautical engineering. I had to forgo a lot of Kraft Dinners and cans of beans to get it. I've given it away twice because I never use it, but it's always come back, so I guess it was meant to be mine.

How does Audels compare with Machinery's Handbook, which I've always used? Worth picking up?

Cheers Garry

SwarfnStuff:
Does this post say something about our age?? I still have my Faber-Castell slide rule in the house someplace. I must admit that I can now only recall how to multiply and divide, through lack of use no doubt.   :doh: Can't find my log book - I think it it is hiding with my laminated copy of the periodic table. But me compass and set squares are in the shed. Calculator and CAD seem to rule now. Certainly WAY easier to re-draw something  with CAD than pencil and paper.

Yankee Tom:
I use Machinery's Handbook for its tables, formulas, and section on properties of materials.

The purpose of the Machinists and Tool Makers Handy Book is: "To provide a complete course of study for those desiring to become machinists, and to help machinists become tool makers".

For the paper work, go to Machinery"s Handbook. If you need to do single point threading, or make use of a plunger back dial indicator, the Audels book is the one.

My Aristo Multilog can still do the job, after all these years.

Tom

Lew_Merrick_PE:
I did not run into Audel's until a decade or so into my career.  I still have copies of the WWII era How to Run an Engine Lathe, How to Run a Milling Machine, and the like that were the books used during my apprenticeship.  They were published (1942-44, as I recall) by the U.S. Department of Labor.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[*] Previous page

Go to full version