> On Jul 9, 2015, at 9:21 PM, ste...@malikoff.com wrote:
> 
> Wow, I wake up and you blokes on the other side of the world have been busy 
> during the night working at getting a bunch of details for me :)
> Thanks Barry, Pete, Paul, Noel, Bill, Adam for your responses - the 
> measurements and photos are exactly what I need. I'll go through them in
> detail soon and adjust the drawing.
> 
> Paul: I will revisit the postscript file and fix up mine from it. There's a 
> reason I try to avoid splines in my CAD drawings, a long time ago
> I did DXFs for laser cutting some keyrings (see 
> http://web.aanet.com.au/~malikoff/jeep/keyring) using splines. The cutter 
> operator replaced
> them with arcs owing to their software not being able to process it properly. 
> Since then I've avoided splines for any drawing I do that has a
> chance of being exported as a DXF (or SVG for that matter) that is to be fed 
> to a CNC device.

Wow, it’s amazing that a device like that would be bothered by splines.  It 
speaks to the lack of competence on the part of the implementer.  Perhaps this 
problem dates back to the dark old ages of first generation cutters and has 
been cured by now?  If not, you can approximate things with arcs, but for it to 
look reasonably close to correct you need more short arcs than you have now.

> I'll also follow up on your observation about the variations in the handbooks 
> font, I'm sure I'll find them on bitsavers.

Not on bitsavers as far as I know (though Al is welcome to place a copy there 
if he wants to do so).  But you can find it on John Wilson’s site, at 
http://www.dbit.com/pub/misc/handbook.ttf

        paul

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