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Success in the Small Shop

John H. Van Deventer
4.9/5 (23377 ratings)
Description:Excerpt from Success in the Small Shop "Success in the small shop" is the reality worked out from a definite idea in technical journalism in the machinery-building field. Early in the year 1914, there came into the possession of the American Machinist a mass of statistical information in regard to the machine shops of the city of Cleveland, Ohio. An analysis of these data gave a number of plotted pages and editorial comments published in September and October of the same year. But a more important result came from the study of the records from those 400 shops when it brought a new realization of the relative importance of the small shops compared with the large ones. In number the smaller are perhaps in the ratio of 9 to 1 to the larger; in variety of work they cover all kinds of metal working and machinery building from the highest type of manufacturing to the simplest job of repairing; in equipment they have everything from the most highly developed, up-to-date machine tools with a full complement of cutting tools and attachments, to old lathes, ancient drilling machines, and a few handfuls of almost worn out small tools; in their management there are as wide differences as can be imagined; and financially they range from heartbreaking failures to successes that bring riches. These facts were impressed so strongly by the Cleveland data, that a careful study was at once made of the place occupied by the small shop in the American machine-building industry, and the determination reached to procure and publish a series of articles devoted particularly to its importance, problems and needs. It was intended that the series should comprehend a large number of subjects, such as economic conditions, financing, accounting, management, machine equipment, small-tool equipment, selection of work, helpful devices, kinks and methods, and the like. The wish was to make the series of practical use to the many men who were battling with the problems and difficulties of a small shop. The first article was published in the first issue of January, 1915, and during the year fifty were presented in all. As a natural result, there were numerous comments and discussions about them offered by readers. These found their regular place in the then current issues of the American Machinist. These fifty articles and a part of the discussions and comments they called forth have now been knit together into book form under the title, "Success in the Small Shop." The purpose is to make the material of further service in this permanent form, with the belief that the information will be helpful, not only to the man who actually owns or manages or works in a small machine shop, but also to men in larger shops where departments are so organized that to all intents and purposes each is a small shop by itself.We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Success in the Small Shop. To get started finding Success in the Small Shop, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed.
Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
Release
2018
ISBN
1330072170

Success in the Small Shop

John H. Van Deventer
4.4/5 (1290744 ratings)
Description: Excerpt from Success in the Small Shop "Success in the small shop" is the reality worked out from a definite idea in technical journalism in the machinery-building field. Early in the year 1914, there came into the possession of the American Machinist a mass of statistical information in regard to the machine shops of the city of Cleveland, Ohio. An analysis of these data gave a number of plotted pages and editorial comments published in September and October of the same year. But a more important result came from the study of the records from those 400 shops when it brought a new realization of the relative importance of the small shops compared with the large ones. In number the smaller are perhaps in the ratio of 9 to 1 to the larger; in variety of work they cover all kinds of metal working and machinery building from the highest type of manufacturing to the simplest job of repairing; in equipment they have everything from the most highly developed, up-to-date machine tools with a full complement of cutting tools and attachments, to old lathes, ancient drilling machines, and a few handfuls of almost worn out small tools; in their management there are as wide differences as can be imagined; and financially they range from heartbreaking failures to successes that bring riches. These facts were impressed so strongly by the Cleveland data, that a careful study was at once made of the place occupied by the small shop in the American machine-building industry, and the determination reached to procure and publish a series of articles devoted particularly to its importance, problems and needs. It was intended that the series should comprehend a large number of subjects, such as economic conditions, financing, accounting, management, machine equipment, small-tool equipment, selection of work, helpful devices, kinks and methods, and the like. The wish was to make the series of practical use to the many men who were battling with the problems and difficulties of a small shop. The first article was published in the first issue of January, 1915, and during the year fifty were presented in all. As a natural result, there were numerous comments and discussions about them offered by readers. These found their regular place in the then current issues of the American Machinist. These fifty articles and a part of the discussions and comments they called forth have now been knit together into book form under the title, "Success in the Small Shop." The purpose is to make the material of further service in this permanent form, with the belief that the information will be helpful, not only to the man who actually owns or manages or works in a small machine shop, but also to men in larger shops where departments are so organized that to all intents and purposes each is a small shop by itself.We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Success in the Small Shop. To get started finding Success in the Small Shop, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed.
Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
Release
2018
ISBN
1330072170

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