. Modern mechanism, exhibiting the latest progress in machines, motors, and the transmission of power, being a supplementary volume to Appletons' cyclopaedia of applied mechanics . y 1 1. Fig. 8.—Mankey wood-work. MOETISING MACHINES. 533 the grain of a board or plank. One result of this cutting is the bringing out with greatclearness of the grain of the wood, which, of course, is totally obscured wjhen the timber iscut with the grain. Nos. ^. 7, 12, IS. and IG are examples of paneling made by inter-secting grooves, producing figures in solid relief. Nos. 5 and 10 illustrate etfects producedby


. Modern mechanism, exhibiting the latest progress in machines, motors, and the transmission of power, being a supplementary volume to Appletons' cyclopaedia of applied mechanics . y 1 1. Fig. 8.—Mankey wood-work. MOETISING MACHINES. 533 the grain of a board or plank. One result of this cutting is the bringing out with greatclearness of the grain of the wood, which, of course, is totally obscured wjhen the timber iscut with the grain. Nos. ^. 7, 12, IS. and IG are examples of paneling made by inter-secting grooves, producing figures in solid relief. Nos. 5 and 10 illustrate etfects producedby curved grooves intersecting and combined. Nos. 6, 7^, and 15 are patterns produced byradial grooves. No. 17 is an ornamental trim produced by cross cutting a board on twosides, as shown in No. i, for example, and then slitting the board longitudinally, the orna-mental figure being afterwards produced by stamping, or any other convenient way, on thefaces. IS is simply a piece of ordinary molding, with a strip made exactly the same wayas 17, but ornamented differently on its face, glued thereto. No. t*^ is an open-work patternproduced from a board cut as in No. i, then slit longit


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade189, booksubjectmechanicalengineering