Identifying part on floor

nem

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Apr 15, 2022
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Came across a piece in the sex dungeon shop, which I need help identifying. It's an isosceles trapezoid, roughly 47mm x 28 mm x 11.5 mm x 4mm with a cap screw stamped "OF" + "010.09" measuring 19 mm x 6 mm with a 4 mm hex head.

My best guess is that it's part of the OF1400. I'm unable to find a matching part on EKAT for it however.
 

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This looks like a limit stop/stop block to be inserted into a rail profile or used to connect something to an extrusion.  I don't think it's from the OF 1400, but possibly an accessory?
 
I think that the “OF 010.9” is a red herring.

This page — which is about Scopema seat swivels — mentions “5mm hex drive heads marked "OF 010.9"” (no picture, though).

So my guess is that the marking on the bolt is generic (unless, of course, you have a Scopema seat swivel ;D )
 
On a metric bolt, the 10.9 indicates hardness grade.  In the US this would be equivalent to a Grade 8 bolt-high quality.  Bolts are basically grade 2, 5, or 8 with a 2 being a softer weaker bolt.  Again, the Europeans beat us in marking the the bolt.  A grade 8 bolt has six lines on the head (at 12,2,4,6,8,10 on the face of a clock).  Grade 5 has 3 markings, grade 2 has none.  With the European markings you do not need a decoder ring to determine quality.

Best way to determine what it came from is to throw it away.  Once it is gone you will find what it came out of. 
 
It most certainly was a red herring.  [big grin]

Mystery solved! It's a retaining corner bracket on a TSB/1-MW 1000 (35000710). Looks to be an unlisted component in the plate assembly (204240).
 
Yardbird said:
Best way to determine what it came from is to throw it away.  Once it is gone you will find what it came out of.

This !!!!!!!!!!!! ^^^^^^^^^  [big grin] [big grin] [big grin]

Inside the last year alone, I've thrown away a small retaining screw holding the bevel lever in place on a Makita LS0714 mitre saw, a similar small screw and washer holding the collet lock housing onto a Makita RP1100C router (they need to tighten them up more), plus a small red-and-black T-shaped piece of plastic which turned out to be part of the converting adaptor for running a Mafell P1CC jigsaw on a Festool rail. I hung onto these darn things for weeks without managing to figure out what they were - and finally decided that since all my stuff was working just fine, they couldn't have been anything all that important.

But then my bevel lever fell off, my collet lock housing got super-loose, and I couldn't run a dead-straight jigsaw line .......
 
woodbutcherbower said:
Yardbird said:
Best way to determine what it came from is to throw it away.  Once it is gone you will find what it came out of.

This !!!!!!!!!!!! ^^^^^^^^^  [big grin] [big grin] [big grin]

Inside the last year alone, I've thrown away a small retaining screw holding the bevel lever in place on a Makita LS0714 mitre saw, a similar small screw and washer holding the collet lock housing onto a Makita RP1100C router (they need to tighten them up more), plus a small red-and-black T-shaped piece of plastic which turned out to be part of the converting adaptor for running a Mafell P1CC jigsaw on a Festool rail. I hung onto these darn things for weeks without managing to figure out what they were - and finally decided that since all my stuff was working just fine, they couldn't have been anything all that important.

But then my bevel lever fell off, my collet lock housing got super-loose, and I couldn't run a dead-straight jigsaw line .......

Been there, done that.

Finally started a "Lost and Found" in a glass jar. Out of the way, but there if I need them.
 
Yardbird said:
Best way to determine what it came from is to throw it away.  Once it is gone you will find what it came out of.

As a corollary, the best way to find anything misplaced is to receive the tracking info on the replacement item ordered.

I've been looking all over for the caliper arms for the Woodpeckers story stick I just realized I had sitting around about 10 years. Pretty sure I have them somewhere but I'm teetering on ordering a set so I can locate them.

RMW
 
Richard/RMW said:
As a corollary, the best way to find anything misplaced is to receive the tracking info on the replacement item ordered.
Ah, that’s why I haven’t found that 6mm collet that I’ve been searching for and had to reorder the other day. I was expecting to find it once I ordered it. I didn’t realise that you have to wait for the tracking info to arrive before finding it. Makes sense though.
;D ;D ;D
 
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