View Poll Results: cramp or clamp ?
- Voters
- 41. You may not vote on this poll
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Clamp
35 85.37% -
Cramp
2 4.88% -
use both terms interchangeably
4 9.76%
Thread: Cramp or Clamp
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27th December 2006, 10:52 PM #1
Cramp or Clamp
simple really . voice your opinion online .
No discussion , it has already been covered since 2004 unless you want to discuss how handsome Charlie is ( he gets it from his Dad of course )
He is walking now and saying Daddy .uhm , where am I ?
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27th December 2006, 11:05 PM #2
A clamp is good for gripping, a cramp is cause for griping!
- Andy Mc
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28th December 2006, 12:33 AM #3
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28th December 2006, 12:37 AM #4
Rick,
you need a "I use both terms interchangeably" option (I don't, but some might)
Mick"If you need a machine today and don't buy it,
tomorrow you will have paid for it and not have it."
- Henry Ford 1938
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28th December 2006, 03:47 PM #5
You're right Mick but I dont know how now and its simple this way anyway . Looks like clamp is easily the prefered term .
uhm , where am I ?
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28th December 2006, 04:46 PM #6Retired
- Join Date
- May 1999
- Location
- Tooradin,Victoria,Australia
- Age
- 74
- Posts
- 2,515
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28th December 2006, 05:09 PM #7Senior Member
- Join Date
- Aug 2006
- Location
- Kotara
- Age
- 77
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- 0
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8th January 2007, 12:32 AM #8
Well there you go.
Any thing with sharp teeth eats meat.
Most powertools have sharp teeth.
People are made of meat.
Abrasives can be just as dangerous as a blade.....and 10 times more painfull.
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14th January 2007, 08:21 AM #9
Cramped in a clamp.
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14th January 2007, 09:28 AM #10
Gripped in a gripe!
Jack the Lad.
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12th February 2007, 08:39 PM #11
Ping - time to get this going again
John A Walton (who wrote the textbook on woodwork used in NSW when I was at school, Woodwork in Theory and Practice) calls the things 'cramps' (p8) and he then used the verb 'clamp'.
John Sainsbury in Planecraft, refers frequently to 'C clamps (G cramps)'.
So it would seem that the usage is not so perverse as some have indicated when they refer to books, suggesting that it is not often used there.Cheers
Jeremy
If it were done when 'tis done, then 'twere well it were done quickly
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28th March 2007, 01:58 PM #12
G'day,
On my recent visit to Brisbane to collect the remaining tools from my Dad's estate I got this clamp. Initially it was rusty as, then with a dip in citric acid I found a really beaut find and that it wasn't a clamp, but a cramp.
You may or may not be able to read all the detail on the body of the cramp, but it reads, "The Maun Carpenters Cramp, made in England by Maun Industries LTD. No. 269/.
The inscription above is very nicely etched. Definitely a keeper and user.
Size: 120x380
So, is cramp the original term and the Yanks got lazy and decided they'd be different and call them clamps, and like most things we've adopted their terms?
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28th March 2007, 03:55 PM #13
OHUCH! I have a terrible Cramp in my hand from tightening so many Clamps.... Onry Japinese pipple gets Clamps in their lists from doing up too many Cramps!
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