cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/9697959

The so-called Blanchard lathe [actually, it’s a shaper since the cutter is a rotating wheel] works much like a modern key-cutting machine with a stock blank [a rough gunstock form] in place of the key blank. An iron master form, in the shape of the musket stock, slowly rotates allowing a guide wheel to roll over it and to direct, in turn, the cutting wheel as it makes identical movements on the rotating wooden stock blank.

https://www.nps.gov/spar/learn/historyculture/thomas-blanchard-and-his-lathe.htm

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    154 minutes ago

    Wow! That’s amazing! I guess I always thought that they were made with like saws and hand sanding and stuff.

  • Optional
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    96 hours ago

    Fun fact - this method would be adopted and optimized by Peavey to make guitars in the 70s.

    🤘

    • @PugJesusOPM
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      35 hours ago

      Really? That’s awesome! Funny how technology can find new applications over the years.

      • Optional
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        12 hours ago

        Yes although just to clarify, I don’t mean that-specific-version-of-the-machine, but the modern equivalent.

        Here’s Hartley Peavey talking about how they came up with the idea and what it was to implement it in guitar manufacture.

  • kersploosh
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    56 hours ago

    I immediately recognized that top pic from the Springfield Armory museum. It’s definitely worth a visit for anyone passing through central Massachusetts.

    • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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      250 minutes ago

      I just found a video of that exhibit on YouTube, but unfortunately I’m unable to find a video of this thing in action.