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Alternating Current (AC)

• Electric Current going Back and Fourth in its direction many times,
used in Power Supplies.
Auger Bit
• Bit shaped like an auger but without a handle one end fits inside a
chuck brace
Carbide
• a binary compound of carbon with an element of lower or
comparable electronegativity.
Chuck
• A Specialized Clamp used to hold an object in place, especially a
cylinder. Mostly located in drills.
Chuck Key
• Help tighten on loosen a chuck in a drill
Countersink
• Conical Hole Cut into a manufactured object, or used to cut such a
hole.
Direct Current (DC)
• A Current flowing in one direction.
Forstner bit
Forstner bits drill a flat-bottomed hole, making
them a necessary tool for many hardware
installations where a precise depth of mortise is
required.
Ground Fault Circuit Interrupter (GFCI)
• Fast Acting Circuit Breaker desing to shut off electric power in the
events of a ground fault.
Ground Fault Protecter
Masonry Bit
• Masonry bits typically are used with a hammer drill, which hammers
the bitinto the material being drilled as it rotates; the hammering
breaks up the masonry at the drill bit tip, and the rotating flutes carry
away the dust.
Revolutions Per Minutes
• the number of turns in one minute. It is a unit of rotational speed or
the frequency of rotation around a fixed axis.
Shank
• The shank is the end of a drill bit grasped by the chuck of a drill. ... In
many cases a general-purpose arrangement is used, such as a bit with
cylindrical shaft and shankin a three-jaw chuck which grips a
cylindrical shank tightly.
Trigger Lock
• A trigger lock is a two-piece lock that fits over a gun's
trigger and trigger guard to prevent a gun from being fired. They're
available in versions with keys or combinations.
Ring Test
• Ring expansion testing (aka ring tension testing) is a well established
midscale test, which allows the linepipe manufacturer and pipeline
operator to evaluate yield strength and damage tolerance behavior of
steel transmission pipelines.
Arbor
• a round object against which material can be forged or shaped; or. a
flanged or tapered or threaded bar that grips a workpiece to be
machined in a lathe.
Kerf
• used to describe the thickness of the cut a woodworking saw blade
makes in a piece of wood as it cuts through it.
Reciprocating
• repetitive up-and-down or back-and-forth linear motion.
Abrasive
• (of a substance or material) capable of polishing or cleaning a hard
surface by rubbing or grinding.
Grit
• abrasive particles or granules, as of sand or other
small, coarse impurities found in the air, food, water, etc.

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