The first part seemed to have gone well. Perhaps it wouldn’t be wrong to say it went at least 80% as well as I could have hoped.
By far the biggest problem I now faced was time. A lot of the equipment I ordered, such as the lathe, didn’t arrive until part way through the exam. Overall I had just a week to finish everything (out of an allowed 3 weeks) and we were now getting into the final few days.
What this really meant, as we shall see, is that mistakes – which are bound to happen – cannot be satisfactorily corrected. In the first year practical exam I made plenty of mistakes, but I had enough time to correct them or rework that entire part.
Unfortunately even with hindsight, there wasn’t much I could have done. Circumstances beyond my control had dictated my timescale.
The reality now was that when I made a mistake, the primary concern would not be reworking that piece but rather damage control. In an exam such as this means that you have to accept that you will lose marks, but just take actions that limit as best as you can the number of marks that you will lose.
This article will show the process I went through to make the plate.
The answer was simple. I needed to start the plate again.
At this stage I only had around a day left to finish everything. Should I start again and spend another 3-4 hours to get to the same stage again, or do I just try and continue onwards?
With hindsight I should have started the plate again. But that is in the safe knowledge that I was able to finish everything; at the time I was working on this my biggest worry was that I wouldn’t be a position to submit anything at all.
So I tried to make the best of the situation. I reasoned that I would lose marks for the finish of the plate and possibly also the measurements. Maybe losing as much as 5-10% from the final mark.
Everything else seemed to be going fairly well up until this point and so I reasoned I could afford to take the hit.
To mitigate the visual effect of the cut, I hammered the brass as flat as I could in an effort to close the saw cut and then carried on with finishing it.
I decided there were a few options available to me:
1) Remake the entire plate
2) Keep the plate as it is, flip it over and just have the have the holes for the steady pins on the wrong side
3) Completely drill out the hole for the arbor, including the oil sink. Then fit a bush in the hole and re-drill and make the oil sink on the correct side
4) Drill the holes again in the correct place and plug the incorrect holes
I didn’t feel I had enough time to rework the entire plate. I wish I did, and certainly would have done so if time wasn’t an issue, but I was in a position where I’d already made a mistake cutting it out, I’d now made another mistake drilling it, and so perhaps there was some comfort in the fact that a lot of the marks I would lose had actually already been lost.
I didn’t want to keep the plate as it was. This solution would have been the best use of my time, but I just couldn’t bring myself to leave such an obvious mistake.
So I seriously considered my 3rd and 4th options. In the end, the 4th choice won out, primarily because of the size of the correction needed, and also that the steady pins were actually covered up by the balance cock. It wasn’t going to be a focal point of the piece, whereas the hole for the jewel would be.
Hi Colin, great article and as I’m reading, I’m reliving the exam, you certainly know how to put
Yourself under pressure! can’t wait to see your approach to the Cock.
I made the Plate twice, the Arbor twice, made two blued screws – keeping the best for the finished piece, the other to assist in assembly/spotting holes, would liked to have made the Cock again but had invested too much time in it, and concluded as you did that I would have to take a few hits on available marks, I also managed to lose a Jewel
Colin interested to know if you’re doing Certificate or Diploma?.
Great website, keep up the good work
Regards
Peter
Peter Currie
26 April, 2014 at 11:57 pm
Hi Colin, great article and as I’m reading, I’m reliving the exam, you certainly know how to put
Yourself under pressure! can’t wait to see your approach to the Cock.
I made the Plate twice, the Arbor twice, made two blued screws – keeping the best for the finished piece, the other to assist in assembly/spotting holes, would liked to have made the Cock again but had invested too much time in it, and concluded as you did that I would have to take a few hits on available marks, I also managed to lose a Jewel
Colin interested to know if you’re doing Certificate or Diploma?.
Great website, keep up the good work
Regards
Peter
Colin
28 April, 2014 at 6:32 am
Many thanks for your comments Peter.
I hope the memories weren’t too painful!
I’m currently doing the Diploma, I started on the exams in the first year it was introduced