Ask and ye shall recieve: Broaching is a machining process that creates holes in machining stock, where the hole needs to be formed in a non-circular shape. It works by forcing a tapered, toothed “broach” through the material, which removes material as it goes and ultimately forms the hole with the cut of the final set of teeth –
The primary use of ‘broach’ refers to creating an entrance in; ‘broach a subject’ is the only situation in which it means otherwise. So panel 4 is actually the most accurate of the matter.
Adam, did you define ‘broach’ without looking it up? I think this makes seven.
Broaching apparently also means ‘to pitch and veer’, which I’ve heard is not the best thing to do with a vending machine (or with a ship, which is what the dictionary is all about). There is also an entry concerning milling, specifically about making non-round holes in metal.
If I were that vending machine, I’d be terribly nervous about Adam’s explorations.
Sempai – that’s my condenser …. no .. no … not in the condensate drain ….. Ahhh*** … I’m making change …… Ktunkaclunk … clatter clatter clishclish … [SierraMist] [dime dime]
Since “broach” also means “to pierce to draw out liquid” I’d have thought that “vending machine” would be one of the easier subjects. It would be harder to broach a stone.
To “broach” while sailing is to heel over (lean over, as when a sudden gust of wind catches the sails) such that the rudder comes out of the water and you lose control. At that point going all the way over is a distinct possibility, and not what you want to happen.
It’s not high up on the Christmas list. It’s after the Yellow Voltron Lion but before crown molding. FYI I’m strongly considering buying my almost 3 year old son all the lions and giving them to him one by one when he gets a bit older
Ask and ye shall recieve: Broaching is a machining process that creates holes in machining stock, where the hole needs to be formed in a non-circular shape. It works by forcing a tapered, toothed “broach” through the material, which removes material as it goes and ultimately forms the hole with the cut of the final set of teeth –
Video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7n1r5XfVkyk
Tunneling in would be more like breaching, 5hrough its breeches if it wore any.
The primary use of ‘broach’ refers to creating an entrance in; ‘broach a subject’ is the only situation in which it means otherwise. So panel 4 is actually the most accurate of the matter.
Adam, did you define ‘broach’ without looking it up? I think this makes seven.
Broaching apparently also means ‘to pitch and veer’, which I’ve heard is not the best thing to do with a vending machine (or with a ship, which is what the dictionary is all about). There is also an entry concerning milling, specifically about making non-round holes in metal.
If I were that vending machine, I’d be terribly nervous about Adam’s explorations.
Sempai – that’s my condenser …. no .. no … not in the condensate drain ….. Ahhh*** … I’m making change …… Ktunkaclunk … clatter clatter clishclish … [SierraMist] [dime dime]
That… that… that is horrible. And I laughed anyways.
Since “broach” also means “to pierce to draw out liquid” I’d have thought that “vending machine” would be one of the easier subjects. It would be harder to broach a stone.
There ya go! Broaching on a Bridgeport Milling Machine with good ole friend AvE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3Ul-s9_MA0
Since we’re broaching stuff… I’m gonna broach the Merry Christmas subject…
Thanks for all the funny this year! Happy Everything! Joy to Your World! Peace!
To “broach” while sailing is to heel over (lean over, as when a sudden gust of wind catches the sails) such that the rudder comes out of the water and you lose control. At that point going all the way over is a distinct possibility, and not what you want to happen.
You’d just need a broaching tool…
What if you just wanted to wear a brooch?
It’s not high up on the Christmas list. It’s after the Yellow Voltron Lion but before crown molding. FYI I’m strongly considering buying my almost 3 year old son all the lions and giving them to him one by one when he gets a bit older