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Quote from: Ken S on June 04, 2026, 06:39:45 PMI learned a new word, "hysteresis". I have known about the effect of "thread slop" on adjusting screws for many years. I first encountered this with the depth adjusting screw of bench planes. For accurate measurement, the final step should be a slight tightening of the screw to leave some load on the threads. This situation occurs even with the adjustment wheels of high quality machinery such as metal lathes. Experienced machinists make this adjustment automatically.I have noticed this the more I use my T8, I have gotten into the habit of making my final adjustment when raising the universal support.
The Tormek online classes mention this in passing, although they have never explained why this happens. The compensation necessity is not caused by the KS-123. It is caused by the threads of the microadjust. It is not a design defect with the microadjust; it is just the nature of the beast with adjustment screws. And, on a practical basis, it is not really a problem with Tormek sharpening, especially with good technique. Use the microadjust by lowering only for rough adjusting. Make the final, more precise adjustment only by raising it.
Ken
Quote from: John Hancock Sr on June 04, 2026, 03:50:46 AMQuote from: tgbto on June 02, 2026, 11:00:17 AMthe KS-123 has significant hysteresisI have not noticed any.
Quote from: tgbto on June 02, 2026, 11:00:17 AMthe KS-123 has significant hysteresisI have not noticed any.
Quote from: tgbto on June 02, 2026, 11:00:17 AMWow, that's a tad judgmental. There are very good apps out there, and the KS-123 has significant hysteresis. Surely there is room for people who already own vernier calipers and are fine with using apps/spreadsheets ? Why the condescension ?That is not condescension, but admiration for all the work that went into it. However, I thought I had developed a simple method, but it grew into a competition for the most sophisticated spreadsheet. An exception was the app by cbwx34, simple and accurate.
Quote from: Dutchman on June 02, 2026, 10:44:14 AM[...] the KS-123, which has halted the growth of computer programs and all communication about it.
What a relief, more focus on the real work.
Quote from: Ken S on June 02, 2026, 03:21:30 AM...I completely agree with you, Ken. The "simple method" with the Cosine Formula has now been replaced by the KS-123, which has halted the growth of computer programs and all communication about it.
As an update, with the advent of the KS-123, I no longer use the kenjig. In my opinion, the kenjig was a sound idea. I feel the same way about the various apps. I just believe that the KS-123 is an improvement, whether we choose to vary angles or stick with our "go to" standards.
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Quote from: Ken S on June 02, 2026, 03:21:30 AMWhile I have occasionally experimented with 12°, based on Wootz' recommendation, 15° has remained my go to setting.
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