• Scam Alert. Members are reminded to NOT send money to buy anything. Don't buy things remote and have it shipped - go get it yourself, pay in person, and take your equipment with you. Scammers have burned people on this forum. Urgency, secrecy, excuses, selling for friend, newish members, FUD, are RED FLAGS. A video conference call is not adequate assurance. Face to face interactions are required. Please report suspicions to the forum admins. Stay Safe - anyone can get scammed.
  • Several Regions have held meetups already, but others are being planned or are evaluating the interest. The Calgary Area Meetup is set for Saturday July 12th at 10am. The signup thread is here! Arbutus has also explored interest in a Fraser Valley meetup but it seems members either missed his thread or had other plans. Let him know if you are interested in a meetup later in the year by posting here! Slowpoke is trying to pull together an Ottawa area meetup later this summer. No date has been selected yet, so let him know if you are interested here! We are not aware of any other meetups being planned this year. If you are interested in doing something in your area, let everyone know and make it happen! Meetups are a great way to make new machining friends and get hands on help in your area. Don’t be shy, sign up and come, or plan your own meetup!

DavidR8's shop shenanigans

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This seems very off topic for this forum, but this is a case where modern dictionaries don't help as much as they might. The word form gilt is an older one - from a time of more ambiguity between the verb (the action of adding gold) and the adjective (a description of gold having been added) was greater. After the great vowel shift, and before the grammarian codification - sometime between Chaucer and Shakespeare - if anyone really wants to explore this part of the lexicon in more detail, it is so off topic here, that we should probably take it off line
 
Birthday present from my lovely wife!
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Nice gift! Not sure how much you plan to use it but there are some fantastic mods out there along with some upgrades to the delivery system to allow for very precision metering and so on. Check out "Tacoma Company" both on YT and online. I made all the upgrades to mine and can do some pretty fantastic stuff with it as far as finishes go.

Have fun with it!
 
Nice gift! Not sure how much you plan to use it but there are some fantastic mods out there along with some upgrades to the delivery system to allow for very precision metering and so on. Check out "Tacoma Company" both on YT and online. I made all the upgrades to mine and can do some pretty fantastic stuff with it as far as finishes go.

Have fun with it!
I'm going to upgrade the lights and likely do the manifold mod.
 
this is a case where modern dictionaries don't help as much as they might.

You might be right.

A few of the old secretaries whose grammar and spelling were impeccable, taught me that the Oxford Dictionary (a large 2 volume pair of books kept at the office) was the only one that could really be trusted. It has gild not gilt. That's why I prefer gild.

But since gilt does appear in other dictionaries, and is some cases separately as noun/verb/adjective, I'm simply going to accept that both are commonly used and therefore both are ok no matter what I prefer. Life goes on.
 
All kinds of language mean only what other people can understand from it. That's one of the problems with those who claim 'perfect' spelling or grammar. And everyone should choose the words that make sense to them ;)

One simple example pertinent to this form is that what we call a gib, is a wedge. No one who knows machines would call it a wedge, but someone who doesn't could.

So whether you use the obscure Scottish ones; the half Gaelic ones from Wales; English in the various iterations; or the very technical ones we generally use here on the forum - The most important thing is that we understand one another
 
One simple example pertinent to this form is that what we call a gib, is a wedge. No one who knows machines would call it a wedge, but someone who doesn't could.
I always assumed a wedge was intended to force things apart or keep things apart. Basically the business surfaces are firmly in contact with adjacent material.
Whereas a gib is more about the wedge shape (and material and surface finish) achieving a precision fit, a defined dimensional SPACE between its mating surface during operation.

AI definition. (I may have coaxed it a bit until it agreed with me LOL)
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Or in German....
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Whereas a gib is more about the wedge shape (and material and surface finish) achieving a precision fit, a defined dimensional SPACE between its mating surface during operation.

One simple example pertinent to this form is that what we call a gib, is a wedge. No one who knows machines would call it a wedge, but someone who doesn't could.

@mbond I agree 100% with your comment about the main objective should always be to achieve understanding.

FWIW, not all gibs are wedges. Some are just long uniform sized plates pushed against another sliding surface with multiple screws along its length.

But your example is a really good one to show how communication can easily break down. Imagine explaining how to adjust a tapered gib to someone who has a gib like I described above.
 
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