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Level?

Watching Scott & Dan recover & level one of the Cue Ball's lovely Brunswick centennials some time back. I asked about the level they were using. They said the level read less than .02" per foot off perfectly level. Anyway, found it interesting to see two good table mechanics at work...so, did a search. I think this was the level they used.

98-6 Machinists Level with Ground and Graduated Vial

So, a question for the engineers here..is it possible to get anything perfectly level? Is there a need beyond the pool table need for level?

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Old 07-12-2019, 04:56 PM
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Printing presses need to be level, machinist's surface plates, all kinds of precision manufacturing and laser beds need to be level... there's more.
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Old 07-12-2019, 04:59 PM
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Scary thing about that level... is that its adjustable.

The way to check that a level reads "level" it to rotate the level 180 deg and compare the bubble, if the bubble is in the same position... you have a good instrument, and hence a "level" surface...
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Old 07-12-2019, 05:06 PM
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For industrial use my group used a laser system that was accurate to better than .010" over 60'. I can't remember the exact numbers but those are pretty close.

We would set initial level/placement and then install permanent targets. At a later date we could come back and use a refective "ball" inserted into the targets to see any change. Initial set up was a ***** but later correction was painless.

System cost a hundred grand or better. Just the damn ball was a couple grand.
Old 07-12-2019, 05:13 PM
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Originally Posted by pwd72s View Post
So, a question for the engineers here..is it possible to get anything perfectly level? Is there a need beyond the pool table need for level?
Just about everything needs “level.” Even if it needs to exist at an angle, the question is, “an angle relative to what?” The answer of course is “level.” Level is an elementary fiducial point of reference.
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Old 07-12-2019, 05:24 PM
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Originally Posted by herr_oberst View Post
Printing presses need to be level, machinist's surface plates, all kinds of precision manufacturing and laser beds need to be level... there's more.
Yeah, and I'd imagine in many cases you need to ensure absolute "flatness" in addition to "levelness".
Old 07-12-2019, 05:31 PM
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Level?

Yep, level is necessary. In the old days of photogrammetry the mechanical equipment was super sensitive to level. They usually required a special concrete, and the machine was bolted down and leveled with super accurate calibration. It could not be moved without another tedious calibration.
Modern Photogrammetry scanners are the same way.

In Vermont we toured a granite quarry. They sold granite blocks that were ground super flat and folks like NASA, MIT would buy them for special instruments. It was accurate as a mirror on a telescope, down to nanometers.
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Old 07-12-2019, 05:33 PM
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Originally Posted by Sooner or later View Post
For industrial use my group used a laser system that was accurate to better than .010" over 60'. I can't remember the exact numbers but those are pretty close.

We would set initial level/placement and then install permanent targets. At a later date we could come back and use a refective "ball" inserted into the targets to see any change. Initial set up was a ***** but later correction was painless.

System cost a hundred grand or better. Just the damn ball was a couple grand.
My system was used on multiple machines in tire building.

An example

There was a building drum that had to be perfectly level. The carcass (bead, liner, ply, apex, sw) was built on that drum. The bead setters were aligned perpendicular to the drum. Tolerance for each was .001". Level and concentric.

Belts, overlay, and tread were built on a separate drum and transferred over the carcass. Same tolerance of .001" at both build and transfer position in all dimensions.

We were always well within those tolerance.
Old 07-12-2019, 05:42 PM
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Originally Posted by Eric Coffey View Post
Yeah, and I'd imagine in many cases you need to ensure absolute "flatness" in addition to "levelness".
Good point. Flat and Level are two different things. Like gravity assuring a small lake is level...but it's flat only on a perfectly still day.
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Old 07-12-2019, 05:59 PM
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A pool table is only perfectly level at one point, maybe no points.
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Old 07-12-2019, 06:17 PM
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When I set the tang sights and also the scopes on my black powder muzzle loader slug guns I set then so the top of the barrel is level. I use a 24 inch digital level that reads to .0001 degrees which if you think about it is way more accurate than shooting a 540 grain slug of lead needs to be. But as noted I set the level and the gun then turn the level around to see if the reading is the same. Fortunately I have no tapered barrels.

When you think of how small an eight foot pool or billiards table is compared to the circumference of the earth, being "level" is a minor relative thing ( 6.08 e-8 feet) or a small amount.
Old 07-12-2019, 06:23 PM
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I have a old Cincinnati 15X60 lathe.. I use a Machinist level on the ways to make sure they are exactly parallel ... if there is any twist in the ways it will cause the cutting tool to cut a taper rather than a straight even cut. The level I have is accurate to .0005"/10 inches By taking readings from near the chuck down to the tail stock and adjusting the legs, you can adjust any twist out of the heavy cast Iron. Just adjust a bit, then wait awhile, then measure again... until you have it perfect.



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Old 07-12-2019, 07:45 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Eric Coffey View Post
Yeah, and I'd imagine in many cases you need to ensure absolute "flatness" in addition to "levelness".


First you make it flat. Then you make it level.
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Old 07-12-2019, 08:36 PM
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"I have a old Cincinnati 15X60 lathe.. "

I'm jealous that you have room for a big lathe in your shop. I see you have a milling machine, too! Nice!
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Old 07-12-2019, 08:38 PM
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It's pretty important when wings are being screwed onto big airplanes. Mr. Higgins would know this better than me, so he can chime in.

When I worked on the 777 program, one of the sections I procured was the wing root area (section 44 and the keel beam, for Boeing folks), which were mated to Boeing-built wings, where tiny variations at the mating surfaces could put the wings pretty far off "even," which was a bad thing for a lot of reasons. This was the first digitally designed airplane, and there were targets outboard at some distance and at the tip that were laser measured within some really tight tolerance. I watched the first wing-to-body join happen on 001 and watched them hit the targets perfectly. Mighty impressive for parts designed and built 9000 miles apart by several different companies.

The key was that everybody measured things from common reference points, all called out from a level nominal point. Also--everybody used the same units of measure, which is another pretty important constant.
Old 07-12-2019, 08:57 PM
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I'm surprised they used a level that short.

If you want to be anal, I have a granite straight edge that would make it more accurate.
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Old 07-12-2019, 09:28 PM
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A pool table is only perfectly level at one point, maybe no points.
There definitely are variances. Thus the true line uttered by Paul Newman in "The color of money". "The balls roll funny for everyone."

At the cue ball, most of the regulars have a favorite table. This is because almost all tables play either short or long, geometrically. Almost all have "rolls", meaning balls, even struck dead center, don't always travel in a straight line. This can be caused by a flaw in the slate, or even a groove worn in the cloth. On my favorite table, assuming a reasonable tight rack, odds are pretty high I'll put the head ball in a side pocket breaking from a spot I know on the left side. Try to mirror that on the right? Almost a guaranteed dry break..no balls pocketed.

The top pros are very good at spotting and working with table variances. I envy that talent. But it's their living. They need to be able to play well on any table they compete on, needing to read the table quickly. In pool, there is definitely a home court advantage.

On "bar box" (coin op) tables found in most bars...nothing is straight or flat. Best technique there, especially on an unfamiliar table, is to forget trying to slow roll shots, shoot at medium speed or higher to minimize the surface flaws.

An old but funny quote. Mosconi, playing fats, watching a ball veer off line: "Did you see that ball roll?" Fats in his snide voice: "They're supposed to roll, Willie. That's why they're round."
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Old 07-12-2019, 11:08 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by herr_oberst View Post
"I have a old Cincinnati 15X60 lathe.. "

I'm jealous that you have room for a big lathe in your shop. I see you have a milling machine, too! Nice!

That pic is my home shop, My business shop has more space, but the home shop is more relaxing for me to play in.
Priorities. We make room for whats important to us... Same with our calendars and checkbooks. I like to have the ability to repair or make anything... Not that I will, or want to when the time comes... but I like to have the skills, and equipment always ready. It brings me a sense of purpose when I can help others or myself. Looking to add a TIG welder soon, but have to figure out where to put it.
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Old 07-13-2019, 05:06 AM
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Originally Posted by wswartzwel View Post
That pic is my home shop, My business shop has more space, but the home shop is more relaxing for me to play in.
Priorities. We make room for whats important to us... Same with our calendars and checkbooks. I like to have the ability to repair or make anything... Not that I will, or want to when the time comes... but I like to have the skills, and equipment always ready. It brings me a sense of purpose when I can help others or myself. Looking to add a TIG welder soon, but have to figure out where to put it.
Will we be seeing a This Old Swartzwel channel soon?
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Old 07-13-2019, 06:45 AM
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Good point. Flat and Level are two different things. Like gravity assuring a small lake is level...but it's flat only on a perfectly still day.
Even small lakes follow the curvature of the earth. Thinking theoretically, if one had a level capable of seeing a highway built exactly level, it would rise as a tangent to the curvature of the earth. The earth curves 7.68" per mile. So a dead level highway a 1000 miles long would be 768 feet high at the far end.

Dead level Los Angeles to Las Vegas and you could just about step out of your car at the penthouse of the MGM Grand. (not quite — 230 feet vs. the total height of the MGM at 293.)

Old 07-13-2019, 02:12 PM
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