User talk:Dontyz

The Cincinnati Machine Tool Company's Numerical Control System The Numerical Control History completely misses the Cincinnati Machine Tool Company's system which was designed to supply 16 Wing Skin Milling machines for the US Airforce. These were enormous machines with a bed around 100ft long. This system used an analogue design. The system was based on torroidal transformers which were energised by 1000cps. Such devices could be constructed around 1959 to an accuracy of 1 in 10,000,000. I believe Giddins and Lewis also had a contract for another 16 machines at the time. The Cincinnati analogue control system was originally designed by EMI Limited of UK. I noticed later in the history there is a reference to the Cincinnati Milacron System coming 8th in the ranking. This was based on the subsequent designs made by Cincinnati themselves after establishing their own Electronics design department.(Dontyz (talk) 11:32, 31 July 2012 (UTC))