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WillAdams ◴[] No.45117323[source]
For folks who are not familiar w/ machine shops, the lathe is a fundamental tool in a shop, and is the only tool in a shop which can replicate itself --- there is even a book series which uses this conceit, the "Gingery Books":

https://gingerybookstore.com/

where Vol. 1 has one setting up an aluminum casting foundry in one's backyard, and Vol. 2 has one using it to make a lathe which is then used to either improve itself or make a better lathe, then one uses it to make the balance of the tools in a machine shop.

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jjk166 ◴[] No.45118024[source]
A lathe can't actually replicate itself completely. Specifically, a lathe can only make ways smaller than its own cross slide's stroke. It would also be impossible to make a typical lathe bed on a lathe, though you theoretically could design an unconventional lathe bed that is possible to make on a lathe, even if grossly impractical.

The real starting point for machine precision is rubbing 3 granite plates together.

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WillAdams ◴[] No.45118406[source]
Yeah, that's a different book, _Foundations of Mechanical Accuracy_:

https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262130806/foundations-of-mechan...

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1. WillAdams ◴[] No.45128319{3}[source]
A better link would have been:

https://mooretool.com/about-us/publications/

(the book is long out of print, and used copies are exorbitant, but maybe if enough folks express interest it will get a reprint)