Riveter Model
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Good Bolt Cutters Serve A Number Of Purposes - ToolsRUs
If you need something to cut through solid steel surfaces like chains, bolts, padlocks and wire, pick up a pair of bolt cutters, also called bolt croppers. They are fairly simple tools designed to give the operator an incredible amount of leverage while generating tremendous cutting force. Numerous jobs may call for a pair of bolt cutters, so everyone from law enforcement personnel and mechanics to handymen and do-it-yourselfers should have a pair in the toolbox.
Some products Hand Drills, Number Punches, Rors Wrenches
Bolt croppers feature two handles of varying length, both of which are attached to blades at a pivot point. Each pivot moves inward towards the other when you pull the handles apart. The inward-moving pivot forces the blades to move apart. Bring the handles back together, and the pivots straighten out again and move apart from each other, bringing the blades together backed by a considerable amount of force. Most bolt cutters can generate 4,500 or more pounds of cutting force, considerably more than what is required to move the open and close the handles.
Common cutter types include angle cut, centre cut, clipper cut and shear cut. Featuring blades that fan out from each other and form a V-shape, the angle-cut variety lets the blades fit easily against a bolt. They usually form a maximum angle of 25 to 35 degrees. Another style is centre-cut type with blades that are spaced equidistantly. Shear blades are inverted much like paper scissor blades, while the clipper cut type features blades that rest flush against a surface, letting you clamp straight down on a bolt.
All types feature blades made of durable, high-strenght steel, although handles vary from maker to maker. Drop-forged or solid steel tubular handles are very common, and usually feature rubber grips for comfort and so the handles don’t slip. Some cutters feature far lighter fiberglass handles. These not only weigh less, but they not electrically conductive, so they are sometimes used to cut live wire.
The amount of cutting force generated depends on the length of the tool. Bolt cutters come in lengths ranging from 12 inches up to 42 inches. Longer-handled cutters more easily cut through the thickest materials. Whatever their blades can get a bite onto, chances are bolt cutters of one size or another can get through it
was the model that posed for Rosie the Riveter from Michigan?
The government decided to launch a propaganda campaign to sell the importance of the war effort and to lure women into working.
They promoted the fictional character of “Rosie the Riveter” as the ideal woman worker: loyal, efficient, patriotic, and pretty (Yellin 43). A song, “Rosie the Riveter”, became very popular in 1942. Norman Rockwell’s image on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post on May 29, 1943 was the first widely publicized pictorial representation of the new “Rosie the Riveter”.
This led to many other “Rosie” images and women to represent that image. For example, the media found Rose Hicker of Eastern Aircraft Company in Tarrytown, New York and pictured her with her partner as they drove in a record number of rivets into the wing of a Grumman “Avenger” Bomber on June 8, 1943. Rose was an instant media success (Dabakis 183). In many other locations and situations around the country, “Rosies” were found and used in the propaganda effort. A few months after Rockwell’s image, the most famous image of Rosie appeared in the government-commissioned poster “We Can Do It” (Yellin 44).
http://www.nps.gov/pwro/collection/website/rosie.htm
Rosie the Riveter became most closely associated with another real woman, Rose Will Monroe, who was born in Pulaski County, Kentucky in 1920 and moved to Michigan during World War II. She worked as a riveter at the Willow Run Aircraft Factory in Ypsilanti, Michigan, building B-29 and B-24 bombers for the U.S. Army Air Forces. Monroe achieved her dream of piloting a plane when she was in her 50's and her love of flying resulted in an accident that contributed to her death 19 years later. Monroe was asked to star in a promotional film about the war effort at home. The song "Rosie the Riveter" was popular at the time, and Monroe happened to best fit the description of the worker depicted in the song. Rosie went on to become perhaps the most widely recognized icon of that era. The films and posters she appeared in were used to encourage women to go to work in support of the war effort.
In 1943-1945, Shirley Karp Dick (who was the original Rosie during 1939-1941) revived her role as Rosie the Riveter. She was paid $6 to model. Two of her most famous photos were of Rosie treading on a book written by Adolf Hitler, and of her in a U.S fighter (with another woman fueling up the plane). During her tenure as Rosie, Shirley was part of the movement that motivated over 11 million women to join in World War II, by doing the paperwork, making guns for soldiers, or doing other service in the war effort. Shirley Karp died on January 15, 2009 at the age of 85; at the time she was the oldest living Rosie the Riveter model.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosie_the_Riveter
Radial Riveters - Model RA Automatic Radial Riveter
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US $8,750.00































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