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by yono » 26 Jun 2015 0:16
Hi Friends this is the original drawing of the final outcome of my Rim Cylinder Protective shield. material would be stainless steel, (if i can afford it) http://i302.photobucket.com/albums/nn11 ... 0bte4t.jpg
hi everyone, im glad to be a member of this very interesting community, our community of locksmiths. i hope i could help others, within my ability, and hope you can help me too, God bless us all fellow locksmiths.
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yono
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by yono » 26 Jun 2015 0:21
hi everyone, im glad to be a member of this very interesting community, our community of locksmiths. i hope i could help others, within my ability, and hope you can help me too, God bless us all fellow locksmiths.
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yono
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- Posts: 384
- Joined: 1 May 2008 4:35
- Location: saudi arabia
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by jeffmoss26 » 26 Jun 2015 11:06
Very nice Yono, I shared the video with a few people. What program did you use to make the drawings?
"I tried smoking a blank once. I was never able to keep the tip lit long enough to inhale." - ltdbjd
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jeffmoss26
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by yono » 26 Jun 2015 11:44
Hi Jeff, the program is sketchup pro, a very good program. regards
hi everyone, im glad to be a member of this very interesting community, our community of locksmiths. i hope i could help others, within my ability, and hope you can help me too, God bless us all fellow locksmiths.
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yono
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- Posts: 384
- Joined: 1 May 2008 4:35
- Location: saudi arabia
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by tomasfuk » 26 Jun 2015 11:59
yono wrote:Hi Friends this is the original drawing of the final outcome of my Rim Cylinder Protective shield. material would be stainless steel...
The shield base should be either freely rotating on the mortise cylinder or secured against rotation by two screws.
Veni, vidi, relinquo. Vale!
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tomasfuk
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by yono » 27 Jun 2015 5:22
hi tomasfuk, i prefer it to be rotating. regards
hi everyone, im glad to be a member of this very interesting community, our community of locksmiths. i hope i could help others, within my ability, and hope you can help me too, God bless us all fellow locksmiths.
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yono
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by tomasfuk » 27 Jun 2015 9:20
I agree. But it seems me that your video shows the base screwed on the mortise cylinder, not freely rotating (what gives an oppportunity for violent attack).
Veni, vidi, relinquo. Vale!
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tomasfuk
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by yono » 27 Jun 2015 12:14
Thanks tomasfuk for the interest, the screws on the base are fixed. it holds the layers of plates. as you might notice the Mortise cylinder in my video are trapped within these plates, actually it differs in my drawing whereas in my drawing it will slide in without dismantling the base as in my video. lack of materials needed, limits my capability to truly follow my drawing, which is the one i intended to follow. when i thought of the rotation movement of the shield, i mean the whole unit will rotates if wrench is applied to the Cylinder shield. on my second thought, if i make the base fixed rigidly to the door, it is also possible, which means adding additional two holes, and putting two countersunk bolt long enough up to the outer layer of the lock housing, where it will just plus on the inside metal surface. (this metal surface is threaded)and these where two threaded bolt will hold into, not just on the door. I appreciate all your questions it improve the idea more. regards.
hi everyone, im glad to be a member of this very interesting community, our community of locksmiths. i hope i could help others, within my ability, and hope you can help me too, God bless us all fellow locksmiths.
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yono
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- Posts: 384
- Joined: 1 May 2008 4:35
- Location: saudi arabia
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by jeffmoss26 » 27 Jun 2015 19:15
Nice - I figured it was Sketchup. At my last job we had a room full of design engineers using Solidworks and AutoCAD.
"I tried smoking a blank once. I was never able to keep the tip lit long enough to inhale." - ltdbjd
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jeffmoss26
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by yono » 28 Jun 2015 2:08
HI jEFF , solidworks is too painstaking to learn, i tried it and give up, i said its for engineers. so i stick to sketchup for practical reason. and even in this sketchup it takes me months and months to learn the basic. whew! but it was wonderful. thanks a lot jeff you are always a friend.regards.
hi everyone, im glad to be a member of this very interesting community, our community of locksmiths. i hope i could help others, within my ability, and hope you can help me too, God bless us all fellow locksmiths.
-
yono
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- Posts: 384
- Joined: 1 May 2008 4:35
- Location: saudi arabia
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