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  2. Router (woodworking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Router_(woodworking)

    There are two standard types of router—plunge and fixed. When using a plunge-base router, the sole of the base is placed on the face of the work with the cutting bit raised above the work, then the motor is turned on and the cutter is lowered into the work. With a fixed-base router, the cut depth is set before the tool is turned on. The sole ...

  3. Combination square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combination_square

    Labelled diagram of the centre finder head with a circle as an example. The centre finder head can be used for: Marking lines through the centre of circular or square objects, such as dowels. Making multiple marks at different angles can be used to identify the point at the centre of the circle.

  4. Screwfix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screwfix

    Screwfix Direct Limited, trading as Screwfix, is a retailer of trade tools, accessories and hardware products based in the United Kingdom. [6] Founded in 1979 as the Woodscrew Supply Company, the company was acquired in July 1999 by Kingfisher plc , which also owns B&Q , and is listed on the London Stock Exchange .

  5. Router - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Router

    Router may refer to: Router (computing), a computer networking device; Router (woodworking), a rotating cutting tool; Router plane, a woodworking hand plane;

  6. Kingfisher plc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingfisher_plc

    Its main retail brands are B&Q, Castorama, Brico Dépôt and Screwfix. [28] The companies now part of the Kingfisher group are: B&Q; operations in the United Kingdom and Ireland; Brico Dépôt; in France, Spain, Portugal and Romania; Castorama; in France and Poland; Koçtaş; 50% joint venture in Turkey; Screwfix; in the United Kingdom and Ireland

  7. Link-state routing protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Link-state_routing_protocol

    The complete set produces the graph for the map of the network. The link-state message giving information about the neighbors is recomputed and then flooded throughout the network whenever there is a change in the connectivity between the node and its neighbors, e.g., when a link fails.

  8. Haber process - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Haber_process

    As with all Haber–Bosch catalysts, nitrogen dissociation is the rate-determining step for ruthenium-activated carbon catalysts. The active center for ruthenium is a so-called B5 site, a 5-fold coordinated position on the Ru(0001) surface where two ruthenium atoms form a step edge with three ruthenium atoms on the Ru(0001) surface. [ 68 ]

  9. Constrictor knot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constrictor_knot

    First called "constrictor knot" in Clifford Ashley's 1944 work The Ashley Book of Knots, this knot likely dates back much further. [5] Although Ashley seemed to imply that he had invented the constrictor knot over 25 years before publishing The Ashley Book of Knots, [1] research indicates that he was not its only originator, but his Book of Knots does seem to be the source of subsequent ...