Free 186 More Best Homemade Tools eBook:  
Get 2,000+ tool plans, full site access, and more.

User Tag List

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 1 2
Results 11 to 19 of 19

Thread: Gear Cutter

  1. #11
    Supporting Member ncollar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    354
    Thanks
    23
    Thanked 180 Times in 126 Posts
    PJ
    How right you are!
    Nelson

    186 More Best Homemade Tools eBook

  2. The Following User Says Thank You to ncollar For This Useful Post:

    PJs (Jul 30, 2018)

  3. #12

    Join Date
    Sep 2017
    Posts
    24
    Thanks
    46
    Thanked 10 Times in 9 Posts
    the ALT 248 is calling an extended ASCII characters.

    Look at this page and you can see other Characters
    https://www.asciitable.com/

    2000 Tool Plans

  4. #13
    Supporting Member ncollar's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2012
    Posts
    354
    Thanks
    23
    Thanked 180 Times in 126 Posts
    And I thought I knew something and you all just keep adding to my brain. Now to remember it and at my age that seems to be a problem.
    Thank you
    Nelson

  5. #14
    PJs
    PJs is offline
    Supporting Member PJs's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2014
    Location
    Northern CA
    Posts
    1,841
    Thanks
    8,337
    Thanked 1,118 Times in 718 Posts

    PJs's Tools
    Quote Originally Posted by TSiArt View Post
    the ALT 248 is calling an extended ASCII characters.

    Look at this page and you can see other Characters
    https://www.asciitable.com/
    Pretty much all of it started with ASCII because it was built into the keyboards and bios early on to handle (display/print) the alpha/numeric we use to communicate with, but that changed as computers went beyond 256. Actually Alt Codes came from MS trying to preserve the original and expanding it with bigger processing bytes/words (8, 16, 32, 64...). Now there is ASCII, ANSI, HTML & Unicode and maybe a few in between all being brought into Unicode for fonts and escape derivatives...but it all goes back to binary and hex.

    PJ
    ‘‘Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.’’
    Mark Twain

  6. #15

    Join Date
    Sep 2017
    Posts
    24
    Thanks
    46
    Thanked 10 Times in 9 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by PJs View Post
    Pretty much all of it started with ASCII because it was built into the keyboards and bios early on to handle (display/print) the alpha/numeric we use to communicate with, but that changed as computers went beyond 256. Actually Alt Codes came from MS trying to preserve the original and expanding it with bigger processing bytes/words (8, 16, 32, 64...). Now there is ASCII, ANSI, HTML & Unicode and maybe a few in between all being brought into Unicode for fonts and escape derivatives...but it all goes back to binary and hex.

    PJ
    Yes,

    My first Computer was 486SX and i "discovered" the ASCII and it was a lot of fun making images of BBS Forums. God I'm old.

  7. #16
    PJs
    PJs is offline
    Supporting Member PJs's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2014
    Location
    Northern CA
    Posts
    1,841
    Thanks
    8,337
    Thanked 1,118 Times in 718 Posts

    PJs's Tools
    Yes,

    My first Computer was 486SX and i "discovered" the ASCII and it was a lot of fun making images of BBS Forums. God I'm old.
    Yes, you are getting there. I started with an old CPM 8" floppy, then an Osborne, a Trash 80, a Commodore or 2, and TaDa an Original IBM XT with a 5mb Bernoulli box and 2 360kb floppy...in like flint. Still have the XT, now with a CGA monitor and a video card the size of a mother board now days...goodness knows why...maybe the Gkids will get a kick out of it. Plus I still remember the original BBS/file server/cwis using Gopher and some basic and Edlin...guess I could let that go now, but BBS'ing was a lot of fun on 300 to 56kbaud dial up. Guess that makes me ancient but had a blast along the way. We've come a long way and harder and harder to keep up especially when CRS sets in!
    ‘‘Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.’’
    Mark Twain

  8. #17
    Supporting Member mklotz's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2015
    Location
    LA, CA, USA
    Posts
    3,438
    Thanks
    357
    Thanked 6,396 Times in 2,119 Posts

    mklotz's Tools
    If you have a 32 bit version of Windows, there's a tool built-in for working with extended codes. Search for the executable "charmap.exe". It has numerous character sets and you can select the character(s) you want and copy them, then paste into your document.

    Bonus hint:

    The Windows search function is severely brain-damaged. Do yourself a favor and get a real search function. I can recommend Ultrasearch...

    https://www.jam-software.com/ultrasearch/

    It's fast and thorough and free.
    ---
    Regards, Marv

    Home Shop Freeware
    https://www.myvirtualnetwork.com/mklotz

  9. #18
    PJs
    PJs is offline
    Supporting Member PJs's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2014
    Location
    Northern CA
    Posts
    1,841
    Thanks
    8,337
    Thanked 1,118 Times in 718 Posts

    PJs's Tools
    Quote Originally Posted by mklotz View Post
    If you have a 32 bit version of Windows, there's a tool built-in for working with extended codes. Search for the executable "charmap.exe". It has numerous character sets and you can select the character(s) you want and copy them, then paste into your document.

    Bonus hint:

    The Windows search function is severely brain-damaged. Do yourself a favor and get a real search function. I can recommend Ultrasearch...

    https://www.jam-software.com/ultrasearch/

    It's fast and thorough and free.
    Good point Marv on using Charmap and it is available in 64bit Win7 Pro. I programmed my Calc Button to a popup with Charmap, Calc and UnitConvert a great little quick converter with a ton, plus you can add custom ones not in the library and set the decimals.

    I miss XTree (note:West Coast Computer Faire and sold for $39.95...where I got it about then and Gold 3.x later). Best ever imho. You could view in lots of formats (ascii, hex, etc.) and edit files...move, copy, zip...Just the best. Ztree is around and decent search features. Had a look at the Jam stuff, may give the "Free Ultrasearch" as a test towards either their TreeSize Pro or Personal...look decent, compared to FM/Win Exploder.

    PJ
    Last edited by PJs; Jul 30, 2018 at 01:26 PM.
    ‘‘Always do right. This will gratify some people and astonish the rest.’’
    Mark Twain

  10. #19
    Supporting Member Radioman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2018
    Location
    Massachusetts
    Posts
    209
    Thanks
    11
    Thanked 87 Times in 53 Posts

    Radioman's Tools
    Homemade tools not necessarily NEW homemade tools.
    Nice work on the gear and the mill. I hope your still making
    cool tools!



    186 More Best Homemade Tools eBook

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •