Dowel vs Mandrel - What's the difference?
dowel | mandrel |
A pin, or block, of wood or metal, fitting into holes in the abutting portions of two pieces, and being partly in one piece and partly in the other, to keep them in their proper relative position.
A wooden rod, as one to make short pins from.
*
(construction) A piece of wood or similar material fitted into a surface not suitable for fastening so that other pieces may fastened to it.
To fasten together with dowels.
To furnish with dowels.
An object used as an aid for shaping a material, e.g. bending a pipe without creasing or kinking it.
A tool or component of a tool that grips]] or [[clamp, clamps something, such as a workpiece to be machined, a machining tool or a part while it is moved.
* 1920 , Lester Gray French, Machinery , Volume 26,
* 1961 , Robert Sprenkle, David Ledet, The Art of Oboe Playing ,
As nouns the difference between dowel and mandrel
is that dowel is a pin, or block, of wood or metal, fitting into holes in the abutting portions of two pieces, and being partly in one piece and partly in the other, to keep them in their proper relative position while mandrel is an object used as an aid for shaping a material, eg bending a pipe without creasing or kinking it.As a verb dowel
is to fasten together with dowels.dowel
English
Alternative forms
* (l) (obsolete)Noun
(en noun)Coordinate terms
* (pin or block of wood or metal) spline, biscuit, tenon * (construction) anchor, screw anchor (US); wall plug (UK).Verb
(dowell)- A cooper dowels pieces for the head of a cask.
Anagrams
*mandrel
English
Noun
(en noun)page 491,
- This socket forms the starting point of the piercing operation, enabling the mandrel to center itself on the work.
page 46,
- When inserted into the staple, the outside of the mandrel should fit the inside of the staple exactly.
