lampshuk
Well-Known Member
This has been bugging me for ages - is it so unusual that a bearing isn't cut that it's worth differentiating it from all other types of bearing with their inconvenient gashes and lacerations?
Not to mention the spelling-autocorrect confusion of those calling it a cutlass bearing! Surely the opposite of a cutless bearing?
Anyway: wikipedia to the rescue:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stave_bearing
"Cutless bearing" is to "Stave bearing" as "Hoover" is to "vacuum cleaner".
This page explains the sort of cuts that are avoided:
http://web.archive.org/web/20110717111846/http://www.tufnol.com/tufnol/default.asp?id=99
Just thought I would share that with anyone who, like me, had been wondering the same thing and not got around to Googling it.
Cheers,
Lampsh.
Not to mention the spelling-autocorrect confusion of those calling it a cutlass bearing! Surely the opposite of a cutless bearing?
Anyway: wikipedia to the rescue:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stave_bearing
"Cutless bearing" is to "Stave bearing" as "Hoover" is to "vacuum cleaner".
This page explains the sort of cuts that are avoided:
http://web.archive.org/web/20110717111846/http://www.tufnol.com/tufnol/default.asp?id=99
Just thought I would share that with anyone who, like me, had been wondering the same thing and not got around to Googling it.
Cheers,
Lampsh.
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