▲ | bluGill 6 days ago | |||||||
Right. You start with any two plates and make them flat with respect to each other. One will be convex and one concave of course, then you take one of those and your third plate and make those two flat with each other, the switch out again using the third plate and the one not swaped out. Keep repeating until all three are flat with respect with each other - only true flat will have all three flat and the repititions keep getting closer. of course if you have a known flat surface you can save effort by making the new plate flate to the known flat. | ||||||||
▲ | KaiserPro 5 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> of course if you have a known flat surface you can save effort by making the new plate flate to the known flat. All the effort! one of the good things about granite flat references, is that they last for ages, so you can get them reasonably cheaply second hand, if you can find a second hand machine shop specialist. | ||||||||
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