Clamp (tool)
From Free net encyclopedia
A clamp is a device to hold or secure an object, to prevent it from moving. In the United Kingdom and Australia, the term cramp is often used in place of clamp when the tool is for temporary use in positioning components in construction and woodworking; thus a G cramp or a sash cramp but a wheel clamp or a surgical clamp.
Contents |
Types of clamps
There are many types of clamps available for many different purposes. Some are temporary, as used to position components whilst fixing them together, others are intended to be permanent. Anything which performs the action of clamping may be called a clamp, so this gives rise to a wide variety of terms across many fields. These are some of the more common ones:
Temporary
Image:Clamps.jpg These clamps (or cramps) are used to position components temporarily for various tasks (see picture for some examples):
- Band clamp or web clamp
- Bar clamp F-clamp or sliding clamp (upper left in the photo)
- Bench clamp (for holding things to a bench top) The bench forms the fixed jaw.
- G clamp (lower centre in the photo)
- Gripe (a specialized clamp, tightened with a wedge, for holding strakes in position when building a clinker boat)
- Handscrew (upper right in the photo)
- Magnetic clamp
- Mitre clamp
- Pipe clamp (top of photo)
- Sash clamp (a specialized, long form of the bar clamp)
- Screw clamp
- Speed clamp
- Toggle clamp
- Toolmakers' clamp (a smaller, precision version of the handscrew, all in steel)
Permanent
Medical Clamps
Other
Reference
- Patrick Spielman (1986). Gluing and Clamping: A Woodworker’s Handbook. Sterling Publishing. ISBN 0-8069-6274-7fr:Serre-joint