The book Manual Training : First Lessons in Wood-Working was written by author Alfred G Alfred George Compton Here you can read free online of Manual Training : First Lessons in Wood-Working book, rate and share your impressions in comments. If you don't know what to write, just answer the question: Why is Manual Training : First Lessons in Wood-Working a good or bad book?
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The cap is secured to 60 Manual Training. the cutting iron by a screw as in Fig. 24, and the two are put together into the block, and held in place by a wedge, as you will readily understand on examining the plane on your bench. Figures 23 and 24 should be carefully compared with your plane, by way of fur- J?tq*2&. ther illustration of the principles of mechanical drawing explained in Les- son VI. With this instrument it is impossible" for the end of the shaving to slide far up the iron, and ca...use a deep split in the wood, because the shaving is caught by the back iron or cap and bent forward. If the cap is thick enough, and set near enough to the edge of the cutting-iron, it will bend the shaving so abruptly as to break it. As long as the shaving was a strong stick or splinter, as at a 6, Fig. 25, the forward movement of the cutting-iron tended to lift this stick up without breaking it, and extend the split Wood - Working. 61 down into the wood; but when the end of the splinter is turned up and broken off, as at c d, the cutting-iron cuts partly through the base of the remaining short piece, turning Ftg.
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