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Small Cabin Forum / Cabin Construction / Tools & Fasteners - History, purpose snd differences
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KinAlberta
Member
# Posted: 4 Jan 2018 09:03 - Edited by: KinAlberta
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Starting a thread for information on the history of different tools and fasteners. It’s sometimes interesting trivia and it’s also a way to learn about the right or best tool (and/or fastener) for the job.


So if you come across some interesting tool and fastener trivia please post a link to it here.

It will provide others with some interesting reading when we’re relaxing at the cabin.



Also Wikipedia has articles describing different screws, carriage/coach bolts, timber bolts, and even sex bolts but sometimes little on their origin and history or the various other important differences.



100 Years of Innovation: History of the Electric Drill | Electrical Contractor Magazine
2016

“This year marks the 100th anniversary of the portable electric drill’s invention. A century ago, the Black + Decker Manufacturing Co. (now Stanley Black + Decker) developed and filed a patent application for a ½-inch portable drill that one person could operate. It had a universal electric motor, which could run on alternating current (AC) or direct current (DC) and the pistol-grip handle with a trigger control. Both features have been on electric drills ever since.


The original portable drill, assembled in 1916, is at the National Museum of American History in...”

“In 2004, Makita developed a brushless motor for a fastening tool for the defense and aerospace industries, and, in 2009, Makita introduced an impact driver with a brushless motor. Manufacturers say tools with brushless motors have as much or more power than tools with conventional “brushed” motors. They also operate more efficiently and are more durable.
 ...”

https://www.ecmag.com/section/your-business/100-years-innovation-history-electric-dri ll




Power Tools History - woodworking plans

https://woodworkingplans223.weebly.com/power-tools-history.html



History of Screws and Screwdrivers
“...In 1798, American David Wilkinson also invented machinery for the mass production of threaded metal screws.

ROBERTSON SCREW
In 1908, square-drive screws were invented by Canadian P. L. Robertson. Twenty-eight years before Henry Phillips patented his Phillips head screws, which are also square-drive screws.The Robertson screw is considered the "first recess-drive type fastener practical for production usage." The design became a North American standard, as published in the sixth edition of Industrial Fasteners Institute Metric and Inch Standards.

A square-drive head on a screw can be better than a slot head because the screwdriver will not slip out of the screw's head during installation. The Model T car made by the Ford Motor Company (one of Robertson's first customers) used over seven hundred Robertson screws.

PHILLIPS HEAD SCREW
In the early 1930s, the Phillips head screw was invented by Henry Phillips. ...”

“SCREWDRIVER
In 1744, the flat-bladed bit for the carpenter's brace was invented, the precursor to the first simple screwdriver. Handheld screwdrivers first appeared after 1800.

TYPES OF SCREWS
...”

https://www.thoughtco.com/history-of-screws-and-screwdrivers-1992422






No history here but a lot more:


All about screws

Excerpts:




“...Here's a rough guide for picking a screw or bolt for a given load:
Start off with the load that needs to be held in tension, call this F. If you have a shear (sideways) load, you should design so that friction or dowell pins will bear the load and not the bolt, but if this isn't an option note that shear strength is 60% of tensile strength in many steels.
We'll use a safety factor of 2.5, so the design load is now 2.5F. Now we need to select a screw with enough strength so that it can withstand the combined external load and pre-load from tightening. Assuming that 80% of the bolt's proof strength is being used up in preload, that leaves 20% to handle 1/3 of the external load. Or in other words, we're looking for a bolt where 60% of its proof strength is greater than the load.
Let's try an example: What size grade 2 bolt is necessary to hold 100 lbs? The proof strength of Grade 2 bolts between .24 and .75 inches is 55 ksi (thousand pounds per square inch), and 60% of this is 34.2 ksi. So, we're looking for a bolt with a tensile area greater than our load (2.5*100 lbs) divided by 33 ksi, or .0076 square inches. A #6 UNC should work. For perspective the diameter of a #6 screw is .138", (1/8 = .125"). If this seems small, keep in mind that the ultimate strength (breaking strength) of a Grade 2 bolt is 74 ksi, so a #6 screw could theoretically hold 672 lbs in pure tension. If you're wondering why bolts you see in cars and weight machines are so large, it's partly to gaurd against loosening and fatigue failure in addition to safety factors.
What about changing loads? According to this Unbrako whitepaper on the Fastener Act, over 85% of failures are due to fatigue and not a simple overloading situation. Think about breaking a paper clip, which is easier: bending it back and forth or out-right pulling it apart? If you have an oscillating load and want a joint to last forever, the best advice we can offer is to multiply the anticipated load by 10 or more, and even this may not be sufficient. Steel can handle about half of its ultimate strength in an alternating load, but add in the pre-load stress and something called a "Stress Concentration Factor" due to the threads and the problem gets more complicated quickly. Here's a good explanation of these effects along with a lot of other great screw information...”

Why is a torque wrench so imprecise? Friction. Some 80+% of applied torque goes into defeating friction, leaving little for actually stretching the bolt. What's worse is that this friction is highly unpredictable and depends heavily on the materials involved and any lubrication that may be present. Most fasteners have a small amount of oil present from the manufacturer to prevent rust. ...”



https://www.elexp.com/Images/AllAboutScrews.pdf



Borrego
Member
# Posted: 4 Jan 2018 11:02
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Very interesting, thanks!

drb777
Member
# Posted: 4 Jan 2018 11:20 - Edited by: drb777
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OK, below is a photo of a tool found during the clean-up of a estate.
I've got an idea, just wonder what others think?


Only marking is a small circle w/ MF within, cast on each half.

16 inches long overall.
Tool or what?
Tool or what?


NorthRick
Member
# Posted: 5 Jan 2018 17:29
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That looks like it could be used to dimple sheet metal in preparation for flush riveting. Just a guess though.

1tentman
Member
# Posted: 5 Jan 2018 20:08
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I think that it is a bull nose ring pliers. Clamped in their nose and tied back to help control them when they are being vaccinated or other work done to them. This is a old one the newer ones are built a little different.

drb777
Member
# Posted: 6 Jan 2018 10:34
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Interesting ideas, with the ball & ring at the business end, both answers seem plausible. At the tail end, the bolt & thumb nut would tend to suggest that once it's applied (and adjusted) it would be attached for a period of time.

My guess is that it's some kind of stretcher, maybe for leather (shoes or tack possibly).

The jury is still out. 'Have any other ideas?

1tentman
Member
# Posted: 6 Jan 2018 11:09
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I talked to a couple of retired farmers this morning at the coffee shop. They all agreed that the bolt and wing nut was added later not original equipment. They also said it could be used for working cattle like I thought, but they dont think thats what its original intent was,because most of the ones used for cattle have a ball on both ends of the prongs.One guy suggested that it might be used to install rivets or snaps in leather harness, nobody really could say what is was made for, like you said the jury is still out . We will just have to wait I know that there is somebody out there that knows what it is used for.

drb777
Member
# Posted: 6 Jan 2018 22:10 - Edited by: drb777
Reply 


Jury is in, and the answer is
Cobbler Leather Tool "Bunion Pliers"

3 photos found online;
bunion shoe stretcher
bunion shoe stretcher
cobbler tool
cobbler tool
application
application


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