• @Maggoty
      link
      124 days ago

      Meh, it’s one of those things that’s going to be around forever. I would be absolutely unsurprised if crosshead screws were still a thing in 4800 ce.

      • @Sludgeyy
        link
        73 days ago

        You’re building a light saber.

        Do you:

        A. Weld everything

        Or

        B. Drill holes and thread the holes for a bolt

        I’m sure they have some kind of crazy riveting technology. Is she installing screws because she wants to be able to easily take apart her lightsaber if needed?

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          13 days ago

          I mean, supposedly some lightsabers were built in a cave. They probably used whatever was on hand, and I’m thinking screws are more common in rubbish strewn pits and rankor caves than welding machines.

          • @Sludgeyy
            link
            13 days ago

            Screws maybe

            But you have to machine a hole in the metal for the screw to function

            You know how hard it would be to drill a hole for a screw in a cave with scrap parts and no power drill?

            All you need to crudely weld, probably as strong as a screw, is heat. Fire is easy in a cave.

            I’d wager they could melt some metal together before devising a cave drill press.

            We have no idea what metal or alloy it is. They could have an alloy that melts easily, but once hard, it adheres to other metals and practically unbreakable. Just find some scraps of that alloy to easily weld.

        • @JusticeForPorygon
          link
          1
          edit-2
          3 days ago

          Republic era lightsabers used neither. They held themselves together kinda like jointing in woodwork.

          Also the image doesn’t show a lightsaber? It’s a bo-staff built out of literal scraps?

        • @Maggoty
          link
          13 days ago

          That depends, is the person building it a DIY tinker, or a mass production factory worker? Because a tinkerer is absolutely going to want to open it up easily.