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Page Title: Drop Bow Pen
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Dividers
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Engineering Aid 3 - Beginning Structural engineering guide book
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Beam  Compass

to step off a series of equal distances, and to divide lines  into  a  number  of  equal  parts. Drop Bow Pen The DROP BOW PEN (fig. 2-16D) is not one of the standard instruments. However, for some jobs it is essential. It is used to ink small circles with diameters of less than a quarter of an inch. As the name indicates, the pen assembly is free to  move  up  and  down  and  to  rotate  around  the main shaft. When using this instrument, hold the pen in the raised position, adjust the setscrew to give  the  desired  radius,  and  then  gently  lower  the pen to the paper surface and draw the circle by rotating  the  pen  around  the  shaft. Maintenance of Compasses and Dividers Figure 2-17 shows the three shapes in which compasses  and  dividers  are  made:  round,  flat,  and bevel. Figure 2-18 shows two types of pivot joints commonly   found   on   compasses   and   dividers. When you select compasses and dividers, test them for alignment by bending the joints and bringing the points together. New instruments are factory adjusted for correct friction setting. They rarely require  adjustment.  A  small  jeweler’s  screwdriver or the screwdriver found in some instrument sets (fig. 2-15H) is used for adjusting most pivot joint instruments. Instruments that require a special tool  should  be  adjusted  by  skilled  instrument repairmen. Pivot joint compasses and dividers should be adjusted so that they may be set without undue friction.  They  should  not  be  so  rigid  that  their 45.158X Figure  2-17.-Shapes  of  compasses  and  dividers:  (A)  Round; (B) Flat; (C) Bevel. 142.34X Figure 2-18.-Sections of pivot joints. manipulation  is  difficult,  nor  so  loose  that  they will not retain their setting. Divider  points  should  be  straight  and  free from burrs. When the dividers are not in use, the points may be protected by sticking them into a small  piece  of  soft  rubber  eraser  or  cork.  When points become dull or minutely uneven in length, make them even by holding the dividers vertically, placing the legs together, and grinding them lightly back and forth against a whetstone. (See fig. 2-19, view A.) Then hold the dividers horizontally and sharpen each point by whetting the outside of it back and forth on the stone, while rolling it from side to side with your fingers (fig. 2-19, view B). The inside of the leg should remain flat and should not  be  ground  on  the  stone.  The  outside  of  the point should not be ground so that a flat surface results. In shaping the point, be careful to avoid shortening the leg. Needles on compasses and dividers should be kept  sharpened  to  a  fine  taper.  When  they  are pushed  into  the  drawing,  they  should  leave  a small, round hole in the paper no larger than a 2-14

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