juergenwt,
I thought this discussion was about tooling and the state of American industry. Some how it degraded into a name calling match. I fully expect someone to drop their trousers and whip out a scale calibrated in both inches and centimeters.
The American federal government is doing its level best to destroy manufacturing in America. If you send some operation over across the salt ponds; you can borrow money, interest free, to make the move. You then can write off the whole thing on your taxes. The IRS is subsidizing the export of our livelihood. Moving to Mexico gets you double rewards.
NAFTA was to be a dropping of trade barriers. Mexico was to open its markets to America (and Canada), stop shooting union members, and stop polluting...sure. Instead we allow a third world dictatorship to export criminals, unwanted local minorities, and poison that passes for food. Mexico is a country rich in minerals, oil and wonderful people. Unfortunately Washington uses my money to prop up a government; that is a lot like a nation that we just used the American army to overthrow. China gets about the same pass from the Most Favored Nation crap. If they will not hold up their end of a treaty; burn the treaty.
Our government rewards laziness. If you lay around and do nothing; you have treasure heaped at your feet in the form of food stamps, welfare, SSI, free daycare, free medical care, free transport, free housing, free education, free heating, free lawyers, free clothing, free recreational drugs, free reproductive assistance, etc. If you try to better yourself by making a product; you are slapped down and taxed to starvation.
A good example is me trying to get some training to sharpen my CNC skills. I have just found out that one of my local public school district trade schools employs teachers that can not program a CNC lathe. I am going to actually be teaching a young fellow how to write G-M code. He is going to this school and he is learning nothing. Fortunately the government is constantly testing them.
In the past I have tried to get some training in AutoCAD. I had to make the jump from AutoCAD four to AutoCAD fourteen by myself. Going from a DOS based system to a Windows based format was a nightmare. The funny thing was none of the pimply faced Engineers I worked with could even use AutoCAD. To them; I was a God of blueprinting. They could not even use a pencil and tee square. That is truly a sad comment on our colleges.
I want to still get some training in Master CAM and I still want to to get a few classes in CNC programming. Feature CAM is just fading away and I have been out of the mainstream long enough to develop poor CNC programming habits. The problem is that most of the local holders of education degrees are dumber than me, if that is possible. Government sponsored teacher's unions are so wonderful. Stepping up the ladder, to college, gets even worse. Just try to go to college and get classes in manufacturing. My alma mater does not even offer classes in CAD or CAM. What they offer is a diploma mill operation that is taught by people that could not feed bar stock into a lathe. But hey...They got one of the best football teams in America.
Government is not the solution to manufacturing's problem. Government is the problem. The export thing makes me puke. Just try to export a product. I double dog dare you to try. Now go buy something from overseas. I just sent ten thousand bucks of my "retirement money" to Japan. I tried for two years to get any American or Canadian company to produce what their catalogs contained. My Japanese parts will soon arrive and some US government bureaucrat will do all the paperwork and make sure there are no glitches. Meanwhile, I have to jump through flaming hoops to ship a lousy cast iron exhaust manifold overseas. Why don't we have a federal agency to help people export products? Please speak up because the sound of chirping crickets is drowning your response. My two US Senators are too busy; investigating a kid's game that is played by millionaire jocks. I am paying for the stadiums, the federal oversight, and all the rest. No congresscritter in Pennsylvania will lift a finger to help a small business export dirty machined thingies overseas.
As for this steaming load of metric versus english measurements; I have my doubts on the experience about someone that would throw that out for argument. Today I drew up seven prints, in AutoCAD. Four of them were done in metric and had no english dimensions on them. I sent these prints out for quoting, after I made the prototypes on an all english manual lathe. One print was done in english and all measurements were in both english and metric. The shop that will do this job will have to press G70 for inch or punch in G71 if they prefer to read the metric dimensions. The last two prints were drawn in english, but the major dimensions were shown in metric, with the english equivalents in the brackets. I am not a machinist but I use whatever system is most convenient for the poor machinist that has to make my parts. I have never met a real machinist that could not rattle off equivalent dimensions in either system. I have a huge cheat sheet next to my desk, and most major machines, because my college educated hat rack sometimes forgets that I have to use a number nineteen drill before I tap a M5-0.8p hole. Anyone that tells me that they use only metric or only english drills is definitely not a machinist. Men use what they have at hand to create what they need.
The main reason we are losing our manufacturing edge is because the tree of liberty needs watering. It will probably fall to my generation to do the deed. Our Illuminati are currently preoccupied; trying to decide which one of three triplets will become President of our republic.
It is well past my bedtime. I have to be at an antique lathe and DOS based CNC mill at five AM. Someone has to pay for all my neighbor's benefits.