Welcome to the magazine that shows you how to build, maintain and run all kinds of powered machinery, from miniature steam locomotives from Gauge 0 up to 15 inches and beyond, traction engines and agricultural machinery from 1" scale to full size, hot air and gas engines, marine and automotive engines, even clocks and automata. We also keep you up to date with what is happening in model engineering clubs around the country, events and exhibitions.
Model Engineers Workshop Magazin
Model Engineers' Workshop is the ideal workshop companion for all hobby engineers. Model Engineers' Workshop shines a spotlight on the tools and techniques used by model makers, light engineers, restorers and customisers and those who like making and modding their own tools. You'll find readers' tips, reviews of workshop equipment as well as articles on restoring old tools and making your own as well as the latest new technologies, techniques and materials. Model Engineers' Workshop magazine publishes 12 great issues a year.
A subscription to Model Engineers Workshop is a must read for the serious model engineering hobbyists! Model Engineers' Workshop magazine deals with machines, materials, processes and techniques for precision metalwork.
Model Engineers' Workshop is a UK hobby magazine published by My Time Media that was spun off Model Engineer in 1990.[1] The magazine focuses on metal working workshop tools and techniques, although in recent years it has given more space to modern technologies such as CAD/CAM and 3D printing.
This collection of eighteen unique projects for home workshop equipment enables the model engineer to create useful and even essential items that cannot be purchased commercially, including an auxiliary workbench, tap holders, distance and height gauges, a lathe back stop, a tailstock die-holder, faceplate clamps, collets, DTI accessories, sash clamps, low profile clamps and a tapping stand. Each project is designed to make the model engineer's task in hand easier than it would have been, had the items not been made. Each design is illustrated with good quality photographs and comprehensive working drawings. Author Harold Hall is a former editor of the enthusiasts' magazine Model Engineers' Workshop, within whose pages all of these projects were originally featured. Table of Contents: Auxiliary Bench. Tapping Guides. Guided Tap Holder. Large Tap Wrench. Distance Gauges. Lathe Tool Height Gauge. Lathe Back Stop. Tailstock Die Holders. Face Plate and Angel Plate Clamps. Lathe Collets. Thin Piece Collets. Dial Test Indicator Accessories. Faceplate Balancing Fixture. Low Profile Clamps. Engineer's Sash Clamps. Tapping Stand. About the Author: Harold Hall was for a number of years the editor of Model Engineers' Workshop magazine and through its pages, he established himself as a mentor to tyro model engineers worldwide. He is the author of seven books in the indispensable Workshop Practice Series and lives in the Hertfordshire countryside. Harold Hall commenced an industrial apprenticeship in 1950 at the age of sixteen and worked as an electrical control systems engineer for thirty-five years before becoming editor of Model Engineer's Workshop magazine in 1991. Following retirement in 1995, he has continued to contribute metalworking articles to almost every issue of the magazine published since then. His crafting hobbies extend beyond model engineering to cabinet making, modelling, marquetry and pencil sketching.
Overview: Model Engineer is the premier UK model engineering magazine. It has been published for over 100 years. Content includes constructional articles, interesting articles on engineering related topics and many other varied subjects about models and model engineering. 2ff7e9595c
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