Wood turnery simply refers to the process of creating legs or spindles turned on a lathe. |
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From hand-made Boston rockers with hand-turned spindles, designers turned to cantilevered cane-backed chairs made of tubular steel. |
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Ataxites consist primarily of nickel-rich taenite, and kamacite is found only in the form of microscopic lamellae and spindles. |
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One is the performance advantage of being able to interleave commands to different physical spindles. |
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Its full-open cover allows easy access to both spindles and tool posts, reducing costly setup times. |
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Newel posts are the supports at the end of flights that transfer the weight of the stair to the floor and support the balustrades or spindles. |
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The morning had been a dull one, not good for fine work, so we sat or stood with our spindles until we took our meat at noon. |
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The spindles and legs are again spokeshaved but secured into position with wedges. |
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The spindles, made from oak, are spokeshaved and tenoned using various spokeshaves. |
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Metaphase spindles with replicated mitotic chromosomes were assembled in meiotic Xenopus egg extracts as described. |
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In the early 1980s, there were definitely some breakage problems with the first titanium Super Record spindles. |
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We currently use both air-bearing spindles and electric motors to rotate the disks. |
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Although I'm only about 180 pounds I've had trouble with Campy cranksets and spindles breaking. |
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The handles are barrel shaped, with a distinct bulge near the middle, rather than cylindrical, on both spindles. |
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It is used for railroad frogs, for steel mill coupling housings, pinions, spindles, and for dipper lips of power shovels operating in quarries. |
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At least one of the spindles can slide along the common axis and squeeze the optic. |
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Operation is convenient, with clevis hitch hookup and easy-to-adjust wheel spindles. |
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The matte finish created by the pattern and the use of wood for the seat frame and spindles further the countrified pretense of the chair. |
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Stair spindles and a banister had also been ripped out and used as firewood while glass carpeted the floors. |
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Based on engineering specifications, the most efficient minimum production level of a spinning mill is 30,000 spindles. |
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This problem was particularly acute in the textile sector where a large number of spindles were set up on the basis of suppliers' credits. |
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He envisioned the same water turning tens of thousands of spindles and producing millions of yards of fabric. |
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Instead she walked to the large weaving chest, opened the lid, and brought forth three spindles. |
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Burginde went to the chest and opened it, and took out the basket of spindles and shuttles on top. |
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Instead of being wound onto spindles, the ropes of wire grass fiber were sent to looms to be tied together into matting. |
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The spindles grasp the fiber and selectively pull it out of the boll, leaving unwanted plant parts or trash behind. |
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Moreover, tetraploid cells do not bud or show abnormal mitotic spindles when placed in water. |
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The spindles could be turned to see each sculpture's equally intricate verso. |
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The spindles are driven by cone drive gear boxes through universal joints capable of up to 6,000 foot-pounds per spindle. |
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Its arms followed the curve of the seat, and the back had six to nine spindles or slats topped by a large crest rail. |
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In sub mutations, we observed spindles that were unipolar, multipolar, or frayed with no defined poles. |
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Davis's are flatter, and by this point he had progressed to using bamboo-turned spindles. |
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All samples are shown at the same magnification, with spindles in green and DNA in blue. |
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It has been shown that activity in the muscle spindles is influenced, via gamma motoneurons, by joint and ligament receptors. |
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The jenny had between six and twenty-four spindles mounted on a sliding carriage. |
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The most common mutant phenotype was an embryo with a polar body near one end and the development of one or two spindles in the middle. |
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Meiotic spindles form after fertilization of the worm embryo in the same cytoplasm that later supports embryonic mitosis. |
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The spindles of Windsor chairs support the spine and move with the sitter's changes in position. |
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The workpiece stays fixed on one machine, and the spindles needed for the multiple grinds ride on the grinder's high-precision wheelhead. |
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Gamma motoneurons that innervate the muscle spindles and affect the spindle outflow are often referred to as the fusimotor system. |
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We see wood take forms that are completely foreign to it, like a chair that's made with spindles and dowels. |
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Like the recessive alleles, frayed spindles and monopolar spindles characterized the spindle defects. |
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Drosophila embryonic spindles are amphiastral and thus centrosomes at the spindle poles play a critical role in their organization. |
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He had carding machinery and 9,000 throstle frame spinning spindles in a three storey building alongside the brook, and 240 looms in a weaving shed alongside Chaddock Lane. |
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There'll always be a huge demand here for raw wool from Australia, provided we can keep the spindles here spinning wool and keep them away from spinning synthetics. |
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Silk is spooled off large reels along the top and two, four or six strands are wound together onto spindles at the bottom, making a stronger yarn. |
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Muscle spindles are primarily influenced by changes in length and are responsible for reflex contraction of the skeletal muscles in response to stretching. |
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And Percivale took it, and found therein a writ and so he read it, and devised the manner of the spindles and of the ship, whence it came, and by whom it was made. |
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The mechanism is almost entirely made of wood, with the movement, frame and wheels in oak, the pendulum in mahogany, and the spindles and pinions in boxwood. |
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The spindles are tenoned completely, then wedged into place. |
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Elimination of drive belts helps to make the spindles maintenance free. |
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This response is thought to be neurally mediated by impulses originating from the muscle spindles in the exercising muscles, tendons, and proprioceptors in the joints. |
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Luckily, some of the original spindles and newel posts were still present, so the Cousley's had them copied and restored the staircase to its former glory. |
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They use spindles made of bamboo, which is something new to us. |
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On the floor, youthful Mirabai Sherke fills her spindles with zari thread. |
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Older projectors had to be threaded manually, with the user placing the film around the sprocket wheels, through the film gate and around the various spindles and guides. |
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The old-fashioned rocker, with spindles or horizontal slats and a caned or wooden seat is a veritable icon of all that is good, patriotic, and reliable in American culture. |
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The stairs are finished with a teak handrail, newel posts, and spindles. |
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Muscle spindles and Golgi tendon organs are receptor organs found inside skeletal muscle, which are stimulated by stretch of the muscle or tension on the tendon. |
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In 1890, a typical cotton mill would have over 60 mules, each with 1,320 spindles, which would operate four times a minute for 56 hours a week. |
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The idea was developed by Hargreaves as a metal frame with eight wooden spindles at one end. |
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A survey in 1812 showed there were between 4 and 5 million mule spindles in use. |
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Toothpicks, emery boards, popsicle sticks, spindles and that old standby, fingers, all worked well for the actual carving. |
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Modern spinning mills are mainly built around open end spinning techniques using rotors or ring spinning techniques using spindles. |
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He realised that if a number of spindles were placed upright and side by side, several threads might be spun at once. |
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The spindles when running threw out a mist of oil at crotch height, that was captured by the clothing of anyone piecing an end. |
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The muscle fibers are innervated via nerve receptors such as muscle spindles, which control proprioceptors. |
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The cause was attributed to the blend of vegetable and mineral oils used to lubricate the spindles. |
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In 1743 a factory opened in Northampton with 50 spindles on each of five of Paul and Wyatt's machines. |
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By 1916 a new mill was constructed, containing 70,200 spindles and 1,300 looms. |
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Muscle spindles in the paraspinal musculature of patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis. |
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It tended to accumulate on the carriage behind the spindles and in the region of the drafting rollers. |
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The machine features vector-controlled spindles with ceramic bearings that provide a speed range from 12,000 to 42,000 rpm. |
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As many as five independent spindles or axes with analog servomotors can be controlled, as well as machines equipped with linear motors. |
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Brookfield Engineering Labs has launched the new Brookfield YR-I rheometer with vane spindles. |
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A few turns are wound onto the spindle, to fix the threads to the bare spindles for a new set. |
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Doffing is performed by the piercers thrutching, that is raising, the cops partially up the spindles, whilst the carriage is out. |
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In 1860, there were more cotton spindles in Lowell than in all eleven states combined that would form the Confederacy. |
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Connection is then established between the attenuated rovings and the spindles. |
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The spinner used his right hand to rapidly turn a wheel which caused all the spindles to revolve, and the thread to be spun. |
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With these counts, the spindles on the return traverse needed to rotate faster than on the outward traverse. |
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On the return, the roving is clamped and the spindles reversed to take up the newly spun thread. |
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In 1788 there were 50,000 spindles in Britain, rising to 7 million over the next 30 years. |
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Spinning at differing speeds, these pulled the thread continuously while other parts twisted it as it wound onto the heavy spindles. |
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By war's end in 1815, there were 140 cotton manufacturers within 30 miles of Providence, employing 26,000 hands and operating 130,000 spindles. |
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The spinning jenny allowed a group of eight spindles to be operated together. |
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The problem, in the past, was that the air used to clean the spindles contained water that would collect in the compressed air lines whenever humidity was high. |
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Hargreaves realized there was no particular reason the spindles had to be horizontal, as they always had been, and he could place them vertically in a row. |
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The Diversacut 2110A Dicer offers ultimate precision thanks to adjustable collars on both cutting spindles, as well as slice adjustment and lockdown features. |
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It was the first practical spinning frame with multiple spindles. |
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Mules were built with 1300 spindles, but were gradually replaced by rings. |
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The revolution of the spindles cease, the drawing rollers stop. |
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The spindle speed was controlled by a drum and weighted ropes, as the headstock moved the ropes twisted the drum, which using a tooth wheel turned the spindles. |
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The spinning mule has a fixed frame with a creel of cylindrical bobbins to hold the roving, connected through the headstock to a parallel carriage with the spindles. |
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A wheel was rapidly turned as the frame was pushed back, and the spindles rotated, twisting the rovings into yarn and collecting it on the spindles. |
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At its peak there were 50,000,000 mule spindles in Lancashire alone. |
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Broadstone Mills Stockport, was built as a double mill with 265,000 mule spindles, but by 1959 it was running 37,500 mule spindles and 70,000 ring spindles. |
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Egypt under Muhammad Ali in the early 19th century had the fifth most productive cotton industry in the world, in terms of the number of spindles per capita. |
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Simulation includes the ability to simulate multiple turrets and spindles for TurnMill applications as well as gang slides, tool posts and turrets for Swiss-type lathes. |
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The hall is inviting and spacious, the focal point being the return staircase with decorative iron frets, spindles and carved and turned newel posts. |
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It was speculated that muscle spindles may be the only possible proprioceptors of which acuity might be systematically modulated through the gamma motoneuron. |
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The earliest helicopter engines were simple mechanical devices, such as rubber bands or spindles, which relegated the size of helicopters to toys and small models. |
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In 1871, Oldham had more spindles than any country in the world except the United States, and in 1909, was spinning more cotton than France and Germany combined. |
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