Fundamentals of dimensional metrology 5th edition pdf download






















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Previews available in: English. Add another edition? Fundamentals of dimensional metrology Ted Busch. Donate this book to the Internet Archive library.

If you own this book, you can mail it to our address below. Borrow Listen. Want to Read. Delete Note Save Note. Download for print-disabled. Check nearby libraries Library. Share this book Facebook. September 29, History. An edition of Fundamentals of dimensional metrology This edition was published in by Delmar in Albany, N. The text continues to use both metric and imperial systems but emphasizes metric measurement devices and concepts in all examples for greater consistency with the latest industry trends.

About the Author Connie L. Dotson is a journeyman tool and die maker and a professional trainer who has taught technical, apprentice, software, and metrology courses in college and private industry. She holds a Master of Business Administration degree with emphasis on adult learning and training design.

Bellus Very dry reading. Of all my CNC class books, this one is definitely the most boring to read. The graphics could be better, as well. An example, there is a diagram of a engine lathe. There were tons of names and arrows to the parts, however, the diagram was so small, you needed a magnifying glass to see what they were pointing at. Either explode some parts, then label them, or have the diagram take up the entire page. Please don't build a class around this book! By Jeffrey A.

Lalone As some others have said, this book would be great for hobbyists. There's a wealth of information in it that is invaluable to machinists, metrologists, engineers and the like.

That said, I'm not a hobbyist - I'm a student. As a teaching aid, this book is awful. The questions are vague - poorly worded, and with little indication if several answers are desired as is often the case. The chapters are poorly organized. If you need to go back into a chapter to look for specific information, good luck finding it.

This book tries to pander to English and Metric units, and it does so poorly. Sometimes, it will address English first and then the next paragraph, perhaps Metric. Other times, it will do the opposite. There are still other times when it tries to tackle both at once, and it renders passages of the book unreadable. The writing style of the book is the horrible love-child of "incredibly dry" and "get to the point! There's lots of superfluous wording and anecdotes, and all of it is a chore to plod through.

Originally written in the 's, the Band Aid's applied over the years certainly show. Many of the images "Figures", in book-speak have captions only tangentially related to them. The image may have things labeled A, B, C, etc.



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