On 11/27/2011 10:26 AM, andy pugh wrote:
> On 7 November 2011 04:32, Kent A. Reed<knbr...@erols.com>  wrote:
>
>> Once you've settled on an approach I hope you'll provide pictures for
>> the rest of us to ooh and aah over :-)
> I have been thinking about this, and settled down to design a purely
> mechanical High-Speed spindle for my milling machine. It has a BT30
> spindle and, like many oldr machines, a range of speeds, all of which
> are slow. In this case the are speeds from 46 to 1200 rpm.
> http://www.bodgesoc.org/HS_Spindle.html
> It looks a bit of a mess in HTML, but if you download the PDFs and
> view them in Adobe Reader they look a lot better, and you can
> pan/tilt/rotate, change to wireframe etc.
> <...>
Thanks, Andy, and best of luck realizing your design. The challenges it 
presents are beyond my present abilities.

As for various people reporting they could not open your web pages, I 
wish such reports would include names/versions of the software involved 
so we could get an idea what happened.

I would guess those having troubles don't have the Adobe Reader plugin 
installed in their browser, although they should have seen the usual 
"Missing Plug-in" message. (Sidebar - It would be nice if browsers were 
more forthcoming about the incoming data that is giving them heartburn.)

I was able to browse your html page with its embedded 3D PDF using 
Google Chrome 15.0.874.121 m, Apple Safari 5.1.1, Firefox 5.0 and above, 
Opera 11.52, and, in the interest of fairness, Microsoft Internet 
Explorer 8.0.6001.18702, all running on an ancient MS Windows XP system 
with Adobe Reader 10.1.1 installed.

On Ubuntu 10.04LTS, I was successful with Mozilla Firefox 3.6.24 and 
Opera 11.52 once I installed Adobe Reader 9.4.6. I couldn't make a go of 
it  with Chromium 15.0.874.106 (yes, "Missing Plug-in"), but only 
because I couldn't sort out how to get Chromium to recognize the Adobe 
Reader plugin. Maybe when I'm fresh tomorrow.

Regards,
Kent


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