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  2. Dowel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dowel

    A dowel plate. The traditional tool for making dowels is a dowel plate, an iron (or better, hardened tool steel) plate with a hole having the size of the desired dowel.To make a dowel, a piece of wood is split or whittled to a size slightly bigger than desired and then driven through the hole in the dowel plate.

  3. Treenail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treenail

    A treenail, also trenail, trennel, or trunnel, is a wooden peg, pin, or dowel used to fasten pieces of wood together, especially in timber frames, covered bridges, wooden shipbuilding and boat building. [1] It is driven into a hole bored through two (or more) pieces of structural wood (mortise and tenon).

  4. Pin insulator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pin_insulator

    A pin insulator is a device that isolates a wire from a physical support such as a pin (a wooden or metal dowel of about 3 cm diameter with screw threads) on a telegraph or utility pole. It is a formed, single layer shape that is made out of a non-conducting material, usually porcelain or glass. It is thought to be the earliest developed ...

  5. Screw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screw

    A typical lag screw can range in diameter from 4 to 20 mm or #10 to 1.25 in (4.83 to 31.75 mm), and lengths from 16 to 200 mm or 1 ⁄ 4 to 6 in (6.35 to 152.40 mm) or longer, with the coarse threads of a wood-screw or sheet-metal-screw threadform (but larger).

  6. Post (structural) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_(structural)

    In the U.K. a strut may be very similar to a post but not carry a beam. [8] In wood construction posts normally land on a sill, but in rare types of buildings the post may continue through to the foundation called an interrupted sill or into the ground called earthfast, post in ground, or posthole construction.

  7. Patrick J. Moore - Pay Pals - The Huffington Post

    data.huffingtonpost.com/paypals/patrick-j-moore

    From January 2008 to December 2012, if you bought shares in companies when Patrick J. Moore joined the board, and sold them when he left, you would have a -40.9 percent return on your investment, compared to a -2.8 percent return from the S&P 500.

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