I do lots of hole layout at work in steel pipes and i can remember the holes sizes but i can't set my dividers from memory. So i like everyone else hold my dividers up to a tape measure or use a rule to set them. Then i made this aluminum plate with a center and the rest of the hole sizes layed out in a semi circle. So now i just stick one leg of the dividers in the center punch mark and the other leg in the size i want. Simple enough. Sure knocked off a bunch of time when you have to layout 25 holes all different sizes. I even have room for sizes i might run across sometime Standard size fittings on the right and 3000# fittings on the left...Bob
Bob Wright
Metal Master Fab
Salem Ohio
Birthplace of the Silver and Deming drill bit.
5 Lathes, SBL Shaper, Lewis Mill, 7 drill presses, 5 welders...
(08-18-2012, 03:24 PM)stevec Wrote: Interesting Bob but for the life of me I can't see a relation to steel pipes, could you elucidate?
No problem. Here is one tank that i make. It has pipe couplings welded in the sides for pipe hookups and thus the guide to layout the hole for the fittings...Bob
Bob Wright
Metal Master Fab
Salem Ohio
Birthplace of the Silver and Deming drill bit.
5 Lathes, SBL Shaper, Lewis Mill, 7 drill presses, 5 welders...
(08-18-2012, 05:02 PM)f350ca Wrote: Neat jig. What do you use for a compass Bob? Doesn't a regular set of dividers lay out the circle wrong as you come down the curve of the pipe.
Yes it is wrong. Those last examples were the extreme of what i do. Usually with the 4" that are close together i tack the couplings to some sq tube with the centers i need. Lay the now tacked together part on the tube and trace it with a long piece of new soapstone. But normally the couplings are inline down the centerline of the pipe...Bob
Bob Wright
Metal Master Fab
Salem Ohio
Birthplace of the Silver and Deming drill bit.
5 Lathes, SBL Shaper, Lewis Mill, 7 drill presses, 5 welders...