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Machinery's 20th

Ishmael

Well-Known Member
Looking through books at a yard sale recently. Figured this was worth a buck.
Lots of neat stuff in here....
 

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The older ones are more valuable to us with our simple manual machines. Mine is the 17th that I found at a thrift store. There are books written on how to access the wealth of knowledge.
 
Funny. There's a fellow elsewhere in this forum who wants to trade his 1937 9th edition for a newer one. Guess people's individual needs differ.
 
I have the 28th edition as a PDF file. It is so big most PDF viewers can't open it or it is really slow to browse.
Brave will open it but it's still a bit slow.
 
Am I the only one who has never been able to be comfy with the title of that book?

Machinery is already plural.

Machinery can't own something.

I would think "Machinery Handbook" would have been better.

GREAT FIND FOR A BUCK!
"Machinery" was the name of a print magazine, that catered to Machine and Metalworking related shops. They saw a use for gathering together a lot of varied, and sometimes hard to find Data sets, as a valuable resource for Machinists as well as other trades. Thus it became "Machinery's" (it belonged and was produced by them) Handbook. It is not a Plural, of Machinery, rather the possessive form.

Great catch for a buck. I have VERY often told guys not to bother buying a current edition of MH, as pretty much anyone with a cell phone or computer access to the internet, is quite capable of finding all that data and more for free. Along with some specs that are not in MH at all, such as the specs for a UNJ thread, which we dealt with regularly in my last shop. FWIW, a UNJ thread uses most of the Unified National Geometry, but places a specified radius at the root of the thread, to add some to the strength. Not included in any of the Editions we ever saw!

I used to buy any copies I could find for under $20, and give them away to guys that seemed to have a need for one. I told all the guys that thought that they 'needed' one, that it was NOT a How-To book, rather a collection of wall charts that could cover a decent sized gymnasium's walls...
 
"Machinery" was the name of a print magazine, that catered to Machine and Metalworking related shops.

PERFECT explanation Trev! It actually makes sense now and it will never bother me again!

Thank you Sir!

I gotta wonder how many of the staff at Machinery Magazine laughed at the idea of people gagging on the name like I did?


I told all the guys that thought that they 'needed' one, that it was NOT a How-To book, rather a collection of wall charts that could cover a decent sized gymnasium's walls...

An excellent description of the book's contents too!
 
"Machinery" was the name of a print magazine, that catered to Machine and Metalworking related shops.

PERFECT explanation Trev! It actually makes sense now and it will never bother me again!

Thank you Sir!

I gotta wonder how many of the staff at Machinery Magazine laughed at the idea of people gagging on the name like I did?


I told all the guys that thought that they 'needed' one, that it was NOT a How-To book, rather a collection of wall charts that could cover a decent sized gymnasium's walls...

An excellent description of the book's contents too!
 
PERFECT explanation Trev! It actually makes sense now and it will never bother me again!

Thank you Sir!

I gotta wonder how many of the staff at Machinery Magazine laughed at the idea of people gagging on the name like I did?
I kinda doubt it crossed very many people's minds at the time. Machinery was a specialized, but fairly widely distributed source of information, news of what developments were taking place, in industry, changes in machines and tooling that were rampant in that era, etc. Pretty well known.
A quickie web search shows that they are apparently still publishing, or at least, someone has possibly picked up the name, as seems so common, or they may actually be the Historical successors still operating.... https://my.mydigitalpublication.co.uk/publication/?m=65921&l=1&p=1&view=issuelistBrowser&ver=html5
 
It wasn't the only handbook. American Machinsts' Handbook written by Calvin & Stanley and published by McGraw Hill was another one.

There are quite a few. At least with that one, old geezers like me are not left wondering whether the author and publisher spoke English.
 
There are quite a few. At least with that one, old geezers like me are not left wondering whether the author and publisher spoke English.
In truth, I would posit, that the publishers thought that buying audience, only "barely" spoke English as they knew it. Being mostly Colonials or Rebels....

There were dozens or more different publishers pounding out books on different subjects at the time. Many crossed over from one area of expertise to others.

Kinda have to pick and choose as you filter through them...
 
I'm working on learning to thread on my lathe so I have to get some target numbers, though the numbers were the same, the formats weren't . I found the 1940 7th edition American Machinists' Handbook easier understand then my 1971 17th edition Machinery's Handbook. My 17th edition mentioned the newly agreed upon ISO threads. So I guess you want 17th and up editions. Neither had 1/4' x22tpi Whitworth which is what I was after . Blondihacks suggested the Engineer's Black Book for reference .

Threads are a review of what I learned 40 years ago. That once iron trap memory has sprung some pretty large leaks over the years. chuckle
 
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