Post by markkw on Jan 7, 2011 5:08:38 GMT -5
Below is a list shown on the ASME website, I chose not to link to it because the political correctness on that site is appalling. Although this list is FAR from complete and does contain some errors, it's okay for a rough draft ... I'd be willing to bet it was put together by an automotive engineer - probably one of those pushing the new "green" coal-powered cars.
Whoever put the list together should have done better research especially on more current events like electric motors ... the list claims 1901 but by the 1870's rotating motor-driven tools were already in limited use and by the mid-late 1880's they were quite common in industry. Reciprocating electric motors were in fairly widespread use by the early 1850's and IIRC the rotating arc-breaker switch came about in the mid-late 1840's.
Lathes were known to have been used as early as the 7th century BC as verticals and later horizontals are documented in Egyptian history. Roman era also documents the use of horizontal bow lathes. Planing/surfacing & sawing machines have been documented to Socrates time. Weaving machines go back even further.
1200 - 1299 Horizontal bench lathe appears, using foot treadle to rotate object.
1485 Evidence of vertical grinding wheel with treadle and crank.
1550 Windmill driven saw. (Low Countries)
1568 Simple mandrel lathe shown on woodcut of Hartman Schopper.
1569 THEATRE DES INSTRUMENTS ET MACHINES written: includes modified center lathe and other guides. (Jacques Besson, France)
1569 - 1578 Improved (screw) lathe described in THEATRUM INSTRUMENTORUM: tool held rigidly and moved axially forward by lead screw. (Jacques Besson, France)
1588 LE DIVERSE ET ARTIFICIOSA MACHINE describes 16th century machines: includes various metal pumps. (Agostino Ramelli, Italy, France)
1662 Water-driven boring mill with guided auger for pump logs illustrated. (Bockler, Britain)
1671 Machine invented for cutting clock wheels: developed by 1784 into commercial availability. (Robert Hooke, Britain)
1700 Earliest accurate metal-working lathes in use.
1700 ca. Iron mandrel lathes start to replace wood versions: written 1698, published 1701. (Father Plumier)
1700 - 1799 Metal, especially cast iron, replaces wood for machine parts.
1750 Lathe with tool holder carriage invented: early use screw drive for precision machinery. (Thiout, Europe)
1750 Mechanical slide rest for lathe appears. (Britain)
1760 First metal-cylinder blowing engine built at Carron Ironworks: use of cast iron in machines led end of wooden construction in power machinery. (John Smeaton, Scotland)
1770 Screw-cutting lathe invented: first to get satisfactory results. (Jesse Ramsden, Britain)
1775 - 1776 Horizotal boring mill invented: bores 57-inch steam cylinder 'correct within the thickness of . . . shilling'. (John Wilkinson, Britain)
1783 Grinder for tools and cutters invented. (Samuel Rehe, France)
1785 Interchangeable musket locks produced with jigs (idea exported via Thomas Jefferson). (France)
1790 ca. Nail-making machine with toggle joint invented. (Jacob Perkins, Massachusetts)
1793 Woodworking machinery patented: includes planing machines with rotary cutters. (Bentham, Britain)
1794 Compound slide rest developed. (Henry Maudslay, Britain)
1794 - 1945 Springfield Armory established for US govt manufacturing: includes research and development, gauges, metal working, etc. (Warner, Thomas Blanchard, Springfield, Mass)
1795 - 1798 Assembly process machines to produce interchangeable gun parts developed (independent of French work). (Whitney and Bentham, New Haven, Conn)
1797 All-metal screw-turning lathe for precision machining introduced (1794—X3). (Henry Maudslay, Britain)
1798 Slide-rest lathe for cutting screw threads patented. (David Wilkinson, Pawtucket, RI)
top 19th Century
1808 Machines devised to make pulley blocks for British Navy: produced by Maudsley. (Marc I Brunel, Britain)
1808 ca. Power compressor used to drive workshop tools: apparently for the first time. (Wm Murdock, Britain)
1810 Lead screw adapted to lathe, leading to large-quantity machine-tool construction. (Henry Maudslay, Britain)
1816 Milling machine invented to reduce hand filing of intricate shapes. (Simeon North, Harpers Ferry Armory)
1817 Metal planing machine. (Roberts, Britain)
1818 Milling machine invented. (Eli Whitney, US)
1818 - 1836 Machine to copy wooden shapes invented; woodworking machines made (several patented). (Thomas Blanchard, Worcester, Mass)
1820 ca. Steam engine (especially marine) and iron furnaces spur machine shop development: lead to development of coal and iron.
1820 - 1849 Lathes, drilling, boring machines and planers -- most primary machine tools -- refined.
1826 Steel-arm filing machine introduced. (James Nasmyth)
1830 Gear-cutting machine with involute cutters and geared indexing improved. (Joseph Whitworth, Britain)
1830 - 1839 Steam engines for locomotives spur machine-shop growth. (US)
1830 - 1859 Milling machines, shapers, grinding machines. (US)
1831 Surface-grinding machine patented. (J W Stone, Washington, DC)
1834 Grinding machine developed: perhaps first. (Wheaton, Providence, RI)
1836 Shaping machine invented: Whitworth soon added crank mechanism. (James Nasmyth, Britain)
1840 ca. Vertical pillar drill with power drive and feed in use (originated in 1750).
1840 - 1844 Rotary drills with metal bits used: English patent by Beart; 1887 Chapman update. (Robt Beart (English), France)
1842 Self-acting power-driven planing machine introduced. (Joseph Whitworth, Britain)
1842 Gear-generating machine for cutting cycloidal teeth developed. (Joseph Saxton, US)
1845 Disc-grinding machines devised. (James Nasmyth, Britain)
1846 Whitney (cylinder) wood-planing machine built. (Baxter Whitney, Massachusetts)
1850 Commercially successful universal milling machine designed (Robbins and Lawrence): first US. (Frederick W Howe, Windsor, Vt)
1850 - 1885 Synthetic grinding wheels developed: introduces surface grinding over hand scraping. (US)
1853 Surface grinder patented. (S Darling, US)
1854 ca. Commercial vertical turret lathe built for Robbins and Lawrence by R W Howe and Henry Stone. (Stone, Howe, Lawrence, Windsor, Vt)
1855 Precision gear-cutter produced: accurate gears, drill index plates, and circular graduating. (Joseph R Brown, Providence, RI)
1856 Hobbing process for making gears: effective with involute-shaped gear that superceded cycloidal in 1880s. (Christian Schiele, US)
1857 Whitney gauge lathe built. (Baxter Whitney, Massachusetts)
1860 Twist drill (for flutes) introduced: increases speed of drilling, leads to Brown and Sharpe universal milling machine. (US)
1860 - 1869 First cylindrical grinder made in US: replaces single-point tool of engine lathe. (US)
1860 - 1879 Universal milling (1861-65) and universal grinding machines (1876) produced. (Joseph Brown and L Sharpe, Providence, RI)
1860 - 1910 Precise metal-working machine tools for mass production grow, requiring standardization. (US)
1863 - 1868 Thread-rolling machines for screw threads built. (Joseph Tanye, Britain)
1869 Machine for planing metal patented: production of fine gear work promotes standardized gauges. (Francis Pratt, Hartford, Conn)
1870 Factories producing heavy machinery appear. (US)
1871 - 1873 Sand blasting developed and introduced for fettling iron castings. (B C Tilghman, Britain)
1873 Automatic screw machine invented (1893, produced finished screws from coiled wire--A2). (C M Spencer, Connecticut)
1878 Spur gears manufactured by mechanical process. (Ambrose Swasey, Hartford, Conn)
1880 ca. Precision roll-grinding machine introduced: determined straightness and uniformity of finish. (J M Poole, US)
1887 Portable electric drills introduced: for shipbuilding. (F J Rowan, Britain)
1887 Spur-gear hobbing machine patented. (C B Grant, US)
1892 Quick-change gearbox invented: flexible lathe device. (W P Norton, US)
1893 Experimental work on planing published: RABOTA I USILIE NEOBKHODIMYYA DLYA OTELENIYA .... (K A Zvorykin, Moscow)
1895 Multispindle automatic lathe introduced for small pieces. (US)
1896 - 1940 Heavy-duty precision, high-production rate grinding machine introduced, Brown and Sharpe. (Charles Norton (Ford), RI and Mass)
1897 Gear-shaping and related cutters patented. (E R Fellows, US)
1899 Grinding machine produced for cones and cups of bicycle ball bearings: changeable templates adjust to various designs of theball-race profile. (Pratt and Whitney, US)
top 20th Century
1900 Tools by Bethlehem Steel Company using Taylor-White steel exhibited at Paris World Exposition. (Taylor-White, Paris)
1900 ca. Magnetic chucks introduced in machine tools. (US)
1902 Hydraulic drives and controls introduced for machine tools. (Brown and Sharpe, US)
1909 ca. Drill sharpening machine patented: adopted worldwide (rights sold to Ingersoll-Rand). (J George Leyner, Littleton, Colo.)
1915 Centerless grinding introduced. (L R Heim, US)
1917 - 1939 Gear and hob measuring machines designed: includes pantograph mechanism and sine arm, and 1939 surface finish recorder. (George Tomlinson, NPL, Britain)
1920 ca. Keller milling machine introduced: die-sinking for three-dimensional copying of template, used for large steel dies in automobile manufacturing.
1920 ca. Electric motors combined with individual machine tools on wide scale (begins as early as 1901). (US)
1921 First industrial jig borer made for precision machining: based on 1912 single-point tool. (Societe Genevoise, Switzerland)
1925 Tool-tip temperature measurements established through independent work of E G Herbert, H Shore, and K Gottwein. (London, Massachusetts (US), USSR)
1927 - 1949 Accuracy of large-turbine gear-teeth finish improves greatly over 20-year period. (IMechE)
1933 Continuous filing and band-saw machine (Do-All) introduced in US. (US)
1938 Machine tool tests and alignments published by IMechE. (G Schlesinger, Britain)
1943 Electro-discharge machining (spark erosion) developed for machine tool manufacturing.
1944 - 1947 Centerless thread-grinding machine patented. (A Scrivener (British), Britain, US)
1950 ca. Portable chain tooth saw replaces manual tree-cutting tools.
Whoever put the list together should have done better research especially on more current events like electric motors ... the list claims 1901 but by the 1870's rotating motor-driven tools were already in limited use and by the mid-late 1880's they were quite common in industry. Reciprocating electric motors were in fairly widespread use by the early 1850's and IIRC the rotating arc-breaker switch came about in the mid-late 1840's.
Lathes were known to have been used as early as the 7th century BC as verticals and later horizontals are documented in Egyptian history. Roman era also documents the use of horizontal bow lathes. Planing/surfacing & sawing machines have been documented to Socrates time. Weaving machines go back even further.
1200 - 1299 Horizontal bench lathe appears, using foot treadle to rotate object.
1485 Evidence of vertical grinding wheel with treadle and crank.
1550 Windmill driven saw. (Low Countries)
1568 Simple mandrel lathe shown on woodcut of Hartman Schopper.
1569 THEATRE DES INSTRUMENTS ET MACHINES written: includes modified center lathe and other guides. (Jacques Besson, France)
1569 - 1578 Improved (screw) lathe described in THEATRUM INSTRUMENTORUM: tool held rigidly and moved axially forward by lead screw. (Jacques Besson, France)
1588 LE DIVERSE ET ARTIFICIOSA MACHINE describes 16th century machines: includes various metal pumps. (Agostino Ramelli, Italy, France)
1662 Water-driven boring mill with guided auger for pump logs illustrated. (Bockler, Britain)
1671 Machine invented for cutting clock wheels: developed by 1784 into commercial availability. (Robert Hooke, Britain)
1700 Earliest accurate metal-working lathes in use.
1700 ca. Iron mandrel lathes start to replace wood versions: written 1698, published 1701. (Father Plumier)
1700 - 1799 Metal, especially cast iron, replaces wood for machine parts.
1750 Lathe with tool holder carriage invented: early use screw drive for precision machinery. (Thiout, Europe)
1750 Mechanical slide rest for lathe appears. (Britain)
1760 First metal-cylinder blowing engine built at Carron Ironworks: use of cast iron in machines led end of wooden construction in power machinery. (John Smeaton, Scotland)
1770 Screw-cutting lathe invented: first to get satisfactory results. (Jesse Ramsden, Britain)
1775 - 1776 Horizotal boring mill invented: bores 57-inch steam cylinder 'correct within the thickness of . . . shilling'. (John Wilkinson, Britain)
1783 Grinder for tools and cutters invented. (Samuel Rehe, France)
1785 Interchangeable musket locks produced with jigs (idea exported via Thomas Jefferson). (France)
1790 ca. Nail-making machine with toggle joint invented. (Jacob Perkins, Massachusetts)
1793 Woodworking machinery patented: includes planing machines with rotary cutters. (Bentham, Britain)
1794 Compound slide rest developed. (Henry Maudslay, Britain)
1794 - 1945 Springfield Armory established for US govt manufacturing: includes research and development, gauges, metal working, etc. (Warner, Thomas Blanchard, Springfield, Mass)
1795 - 1798 Assembly process machines to produce interchangeable gun parts developed (independent of French work). (Whitney and Bentham, New Haven, Conn)
1797 All-metal screw-turning lathe for precision machining introduced (1794—X3). (Henry Maudslay, Britain)
1798 Slide-rest lathe for cutting screw threads patented. (David Wilkinson, Pawtucket, RI)
top 19th Century
1808 Machines devised to make pulley blocks for British Navy: produced by Maudsley. (Marc I Brunel, Britain)
1808 ca. Power compressor used to drive workshop tools: apparently for the first time. (Wm Murdock, Britain)
1810 Lead screw adapted to lathe, leading to large-quantity machine-tool construction. (Henry Maudslay, Britain)
1816 Milling machine invented to reduce hand filing of intricate shapes. (Simeon North, Harpers Ferry Armory)
1817 Metal planing machine. (Roberts, Britain)
1818 Milling machine invented. (Eli Whitney, US)
1818 - 1836 Machine to copy wooden shapes invented; woodworking machines made (several patented). (Thomas Blanchard, Worcester, Mass)
1820 ca. Steam engine (especially marine) and iron furnaces spur machine shop development: lead to development of coal and iron.
1820 - 1849 Lathes, drilling, boring machines and planers -- most primary machine tools -- refined.
1826 Steel-arm filing machine introduced. (James Nasmyth)
1830 Gear-cutting machine with involute cutters and geared indexing improved. (Joseph Whitworth, Britain)
1830 - 1839 Steam engines for locomotives spur machine-shop growth. (US)
1830 - 1859 Milling machines, shapers, grinding machines. (US)
1831 Surface-grinding machine patented. (J W Stone, Washington, DC)
1834 Grinding machine developed: perhaps first. (Wheaton, Providence, RI)
1836 Shaping machine invented: Whitworth soon added crank mechanism. (James Nasmyth, Britain)
1840 ca. Vertical pillar drill with power drive and feed in use (originated in 1750).
1840 - 1844 Rotary drills with metal bits used: English patent by Beart; 1887 Chapman update. (Robt Beart (English), France)
1842 Self-acting power-driven planing machine introduced. (Joseph Whitworth, Britain)
1842 Gear-generating machine for cutting cycloidal teeth developed. (Joseph Saxton, US)
1845 Disc-grinding machines devised. (James Nasmyth, Britain)
1846 Whitney (cylinder) wood-planing machine built. (Baxter Whitney, Massachusetts)
1850 Commercially successful universal milling machine designed (Robbins and Lawrence): first US. (Frederick W Howe, Windsor, Vt)
1850 - 1885 Synthetic grinding wheels developed: introduces surface grinding over hand scraping. (US)
1853 Surface grinder patented. (S Darling, US)
1854 ca. Commercial vertical turret lathe built for Robbins and Lawrence by R W Howe and Henry Stone. (Stone, Howe, Lawrence, Windsor, Vt)
1855 Precision gear-cutter produced: accurate gears, drill index plates, and circular graduating. (Joseph R Brown, Providence, RI)
1856 Hobbing process for making gears: effective with involute-shaped gear that superceded cycloidal in 1880s. (Christian Schiele, US)
1857 Whitney gauge lathe built. (Baxter Whitney, Massachusetts)
1860 Twist drill (for flutes) introduced: increases speed of drilling, leads to Brown and Sharpe universal milling machine. (US)
1860 - 1869 First cylindrical grinder made in US: replaces single-point tool of engine lathe. (US)
1860 - 1879 Universal milling (1861-65) and universal grinding machines (1876) produced. (Joseph Brown and L Sharpe, Providence, RI)
1860 - 1910 Precise metal-working machine tools for mass production grow, requiring standardization. (US)
1863 - 1868 Thread-rolling machines for screw threads built. (Joseph Tanye, Britain)
1869 Machine for planing metal patented: production of fine gear work promotes standardized gauges. (Francis Pratt, Hartford, Conn)
1870 Factories producing heavy machinery appear. (US)
1871 - 1873 Sand blasting developed and introduced for fettling iron castings. (B C Tilghman, Britain)
1873 Automatic screw machine invented (1893, produced finished screws from coiled wire--A2). (C M Spencer, Connecticut)
1878 Spur gears manufactured by mechanical process. (Ambrose Swasey, Hartford, Conn)
1880 ca. Precision roll-grinding machine introduced: determined straightness and uniformity of finish. (J M Poole, US)
1887 Portable electric drills introduced: for shipbuilding. (F J Rowan, Britain)
1887 Spur-gear hobbing machine patented. (C B Grant, US)
1892 Quick-change gearbox invented: flexible lathe device. (W P Norton, US)
1893 Experimental work on planing published: RABOTA I USILIE NEOBKHODIMYYA DLYA OTELENIYA .... (K A Zvorykin, Moscow)
1895 Multispindle automatic lathe introduced for small pieces. (US)
1896 - 1940 Heavy-duty precision, high-production rate grinding machine introduced, Brown and Sharpe. (Charles Norton (Ford), RI and Mass)
1897 Gear-shaping and related cutters patented. (E R Fellows, US)
1899 Grinding machine produced for cones and cups of bicycle ball bearings: changeable templates adjust to various designs of theball-race profile. (Pratt and Whitney, US)
top 20th Century
1900 Tools by Bethlehem Steel Company using Taylor-White steel exhibited at Paris World Exposition. (Taylor-White, Paris)
1900 ca. Magnetic chucks introduced in machine tools. (US)
1902 Hydraulic drives and controls introduced for machine tools. (Brown and Sharpe, US)
1909 ca. Drill sharpening machine patented: adopted worldwide (rights sold to Ingersoll-Rand). (J George Leyner, Littleton, Colo.)
1915 Centerless grinding introduced. (L R Heim, US)
1917 - 1939 Gear and hob measuring machines designed: includes pantograph mechanism and sine arm, and 1939 surface finish recorder. (George Tomlinson, NPL, Britain)
1920 ca. Keller milling machine introduced: die-sinking for three-dimensional copying of template, used for large steel dies in automobile manufacturing.
1920 ca. Electric motors combined with individual machine tools on wide scale (begins as early as 1901). (US)
1921 First industrial jig borer made for precision machining: based on 1912 single-point tool. (Societe Genevoise, Switzerland)
1925 Tool-tip temperature measurements established through independent work of E G Herbert, H Shore, and K Gottwein. (London, Massachusetts (US), USSR)
1927 - 1949 Accuracy of large-turbine gear-teeth finish improves greatly over 20-year period. (IMechE)
1933 Continuous filing and band-saw machine (Do-All) introduced in US. (US)
1938 Machine tool tests and alignments published by IMechE. (G Schlesinger, Britain)
1943 Electro-discharge machining (spark erosion) developed for machine tool manufacturing.
1944 - 1947 Centerless thread-grinding machine patented. (A Scrivener (British), Britain, US)
1950 ca. Portable chain tooth saw replaces manual tree-cutting tools.