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Machinery's Handbook for machine shop and drafting-room; a reference book on machine design and shop practice for the mechanical engineer, draftsman, toolmaker, and machinist (the full title of the 1st edition) is a classic reference work in mechanical engineering and practical workshop mechanics in one volume published by Industrial Press, New ...
Industrial Press's flagship title is the Machinery's Handbook. It is a reference for mechanical and manufacturing engineers, designers, draftsmen, toolmakers, and machinists. It is a reference for mechanical and manufacturing engineers, designers, draftsmen, toolmakers, and machinists.
Franklin Day Jones (1879–1967) was an author in mechanical engineering and toolmaking. [1] He wrote the first edition of Machinery's Handbook (1914, Industrial Press), with engineer Erik Oberg.
American Machinists' Handbook was a McGraw-Hill reference book similar to Industrial Press's Machinery's Handbook. (The latter title, still in print and regularly revised, is the one that machinists today are usually referring to when they speak imprecisely of "the machinist's handbook" or "the machinists' handbook".)
(Although the history page on Industrial Press's own website says that Machinery was started "in about 1880", both the Library of Congress's catalog [1] and the autobiography [2] of Machinery 's first chief editor, Fred H. Colvin, place its beginning in 1894.) In 1914, the first edition of Machinery's Handbook was published.
For decades, American Machinist and several other key trade journals, including the Industrial Press's Machinery (of which Colvin was the founding editor [9]), helped machinists, from machine tool builders and job shop operators to factory hands, to keep abreast of current practice and new developments in a way that they formerly had not. [10]