by Fred D. Crawshaw (Author)
Discover the quiet precision of an essential workshop volume. Perfect for makers and machinists. Metal Spinning (Popular Mechanics Handbooks) by D. Crawshaw, Fred is a metalworking handbook built for the bench and ready to be consulted while work is underway. It reads like a workshop reference guide and practical shop manual, pairing straightforward explanation with time-tested method so that spinning metal techniques become reliable rather than imitative. The prose is spare and instructive; the emphasis is on repeatable motion, safe practice and measured judgement. Readers will find approaches that translate to diy metal projects, repairs and small-scale manufacture, while those teaching technical subjects will appreciate the book's steady, schoolroom-friendly logic. Its lessons also translate to restoration, bespoke fabrication and the small-shop economy, proving that classic shop methods still underpin much modern metalwork. The concise style encourages repeated consultation; readers return to it for project troubleshooting as well as steady skill-building. Practical examples and methodical instruction make it immediately useful for small projects, while its emphasis on judgement over gimmickry ensures longevity; skills learned from its pages transfer to other metalworking trades. As an early 20th century manual in the popular mechanics series, this volume records a formative chapter in industrial arts instruction and preserves vintage craft techniques that inform modern practice. It functions as a classic metalworking guide and a technical education resource, useful to machinists and hobbyists, to teachers seeking historical perspective, and to casual readers drawn to the mechanics of making. Collectors and researchers value it as a primary document of technique and pedagogy; to classic-literature collectors it offers the rarer pleasure of a reference book that still works in the hand. As much a study in technique as a period document, it gives modern makers an appetite for historically grounded craft and offers scholars an unvarnished look at early technical pedagogy. For anyone assembling a workshop library or collecting classic industrial texts, this edition is a welcome restoration. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today's and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector's item and a cultural treasure.
Number of Pages: 78
Dimensions: 0.31 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: November 02, 2020