This is a cylinder
This is a cylinder
Thanks
No, this is cylinder, pi*r^2*h.
But what is the volume? What material is it made from? When do I pop it into the lathe?
>But what is the volume?
see >What material is it made from?
Doesn't matter, volume remains the same
>When do I pop it into the lathe?
When it's not perfect
Okay just let me pop this into the lathe with an RPM and FPR set for aluminum and see what happens!
Oh look at that I chucked it from the lathe and now 10 people are dead, yay!
Nigga you mean circular prism
>Oh look at that I chucked it from the lathe and now 10 people are dead, yay!
Literally won't happen, you'll chip the tool bit and you or the cnc will stop.
Unless you are a literal retard.(the cnc will stop regardless)
technically its a canister but whatever...
One is mathematically defined, the other isn't, guess which is which.
How do you find the volume of the cylinder?
I was talking about manual lathe though. I haven't gotten any time on the CNC machines yet.
just ask it
>I was talking about manual lathe though.
Which is when you stop, its very noticeable.
And even if you don't, as long as you properly fastened the piece you are working on in the choke, nothing will go flying, apart from sparks and peoples sights looking at you like a retard.
Yeah that's true. I was just fucking around anyway. I really am enjoying learning the trade though.
>guess which is which.
A 'cylinder' is a loose description that could describe anything.
A canister is more precise and actually correct.
google is your friend user.
A cylinder is literally described by a mathematical formula.
A canister "can be either a cylindrical or rectangular container"
No you dumbass it's cube
>A cylinder is literally described by a mathematical formula.
Ya, in 4th grade math
Wait until you get to college. Your 'cylinders' will not be accepted there.
Canisters imply volume.
No, canister implies volume but is otherwise ambiguous, but nothing more, cylinder is well defined in math with regards to both shape and volume, which is why both mathematicians and people who deal in 3D computation/graphics accept cylinders as one of the predefined primitives.
Pi×radius^2×height
BUT if the height is 3cm and the volume is 72cm3 what is the area
>accept cylinders as one of the predefined primitives
lol - ya it's 'accepted' but not technically definitive.
if you referred to a cylinder in high school / college, the teacher would ask you to elaborate
>technically definitive
more so than a "canister", which you will never hear a mathematician use, unless explicitly defined, unlike cylinders, which are by their very nature explicitly defined, and perfectly defined.
r u a sperg or are you just going along with the troll?
haha l0ng boi
How about you define a canister, to prove your point?
a canister refers to a physical object in the shape of a cylinder, typically metallic. a cylinder is a geometric/mathematical object/shape
>refers to
>typically
hence why I said ambiguous
>a cylinder is a geometric/mathematical object/shape
which is exactly what I've been saying this whole time
and I said that he's fucking trolling you, then i asked if you were an aspie because you couldn't see that.
and yet you both, well, you, after you realized you'd lost, failed to prove me wrong.
is this b8? I am saying it's fucking obvious that you were right.
Well, good.
Maybe he learned something, because I sure as hell didn't, sufficiently drunk I'll respond to bait any day of the week.
drunk on a Saturday day night, pathetic
I think you mean "since Friday evening", I don't have to wake up until Monday afternoon, and I find the best way to calm the nerves is a couple of bottles of whiskey and a six-pack of beer.
I doubt it, OP
All the above is a "vessel". Made to contain objects. Liquids solids or otherwise.