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-   -   new pinback column (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=202478)

springpin 03-02-2015 05:20 PM

new pinback column
 
I just posted a new column on my blog,
baseballpinbackbuttons@wordpress.com. I hope you enjoy it.

Paul

slidekellyslide 03-02-2015 06:30 PM

This is the correct link

https://baseballpinbackbuttons.wordpress.com/

ooo-ribay 03-02-2015 06:55 PM

Another fascinating find, Paul. I am glad you are back to blogging.

Even with your description, I'm still unclear on how the "pinning mechanism" is attached to the badge. Perhaps you could give us a photo showing the outside, top edge?

springpin 03-03-2015 08:17 AM

Rob,

I labored for over an hour in writing that one paragraph which describes the pinning mechanism. I am normally good with words, but carving out this description was very difficult for me. By your question, I still didn't fully explain it.

First, being a 3-D object, I have no idea how I would scan it from its edge. I suck at all technology-related things, even cell phones. Hell, I can't even remember the link to my own blog (thanks for citing it properly, Dan). So I will use some words in reference to the two scans.

Let's start with the badge part. Have you ever bought a can of ground coffee? If so, to open it there was a little tab you pulled that went all around the circumference of the can, separating the lid from the can. That flat lid had about a 1/4" lip to it, useful in re-sealing the can. Now imagine you drilled a 1/8" hole in the middle of the 1/4" lip. If you are still with me, that round metal lid with one hole drilled in the lip (or technically speaking, the flange) is your Lynch badge.

Now look at the first scan that shows the front of the badge. At the upper most part of the scanned image is something that looks like the top part of a bobby pin. That "thing" is what I referred to as the illusion of two wires in parallel. In fact, it is all the same wire with a 180 degree bend at the top. You would take the holed badge and rotated it 180 degrees so now the hole is at the 6:00 position. Next, you turn the badge over so now you are looking at its reverse. Essentially you have reversed everything: the top becomes the bottom and the front becomes the back. Then you insert the tip of the "bobby pin" into the hole. Now the badge slides all the way down to the opposite end of the bobby pin, where there is small loop or notch in the wire. The loop or notch is ever so slightly wider than the space between the hole in the flange and the badge itself. It is at this point the badge "flips"----now the bottom becomes the top and the back becomes the front. You are then looking at the "finished product": the front side of the badge with a hole at the 12:00 position (that you cannot see because the hole was drilled in the flange).

I'm no engineer, but I thought the design was amazing. Lynch did to your everyday spring pin what Einstein did to Newton. While I do not expect to win the Pulitzer prize for this post, at the least I expect you to nominate me for it, Rob. And thanks for the compliment.

Paul

Leon 03-03-2015 11:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by springpin (Post 1386657)
Rob,

I labored for over an hour in writing that one paragraph which describes the pinning mechanism. I am normally good with words, but carving out this description was very difficult for me. By your question, I still didn't fully explain it.

First, being a 3-D object, I have no idea how I would scan it from its edge. I suck at all technology-related things, even cell phones. Hell, I can't even remember the link to my own blog (thanks for citing it properly, Dan). So I will use some words in reference to the two scans.

Let's start with the badge part. Have you ever bought a can of ground coffee? If so, to open it there was a little tab you pulled that went all around the circumference of the can, separating the lid from the can. That flat lid had about a 1/4" lip to it, useful in re-sealing the can. Now imagine you drilled a 1/8" hole in the middle of the 1/4" lip. If you are still with me, that round metal lid with one hole drilled in the lip (or technically speaking, the flange) is your Lynch badge.

Now look at the first scan that shows the front of the badge. At the upper most part of the scanned image is something that looks like the top part of a bobby pin. That "thing" is what I referred to as the illusion of two wires in parallel. In fact, it is all the same wire with a 180 degree bend at the top. You would take the holed badge and rotated it 180 degrees so now the hole is at the 6:00 position. Next, you turn the badge over so now you are looking at its reverse. Essentially you have reversed everything: the top becomes the bottom and the front becomes the back. Then you insert the tip of the "bobby pin" into the hole. Now the badge slides all the way down to the opposite end of the bobby pin, where there is small loop or notch in the wire. The loop or notch is ever so slightly wider than the space between the hole in the flange and the badge itself. It is at this point the badge "flips"----now the bottom becomes the top and the back becomes the front. You are then looking at the "finished product": the front side of the badge with a hole at the 12:00 position (that you cannot see because the hole was drilled in the flange).

I'm no engineer, but I thought the design was amazing. Lynch did to your everyday spring pin what Einstein did to Newton. While I do not expect to win the Pulitzer prize for this post, at the least I expect you to nominate me for it, Rob. And thanks for the compliment.

Paul

Great explanation and blog. Thanks Paul.

springpin 03-03-2015 12:44 PM

Thank you, Leon. I am sure my blog contains TMI for many readers, but I just love writing about baseball pinback buttons.

Best,

Paul

ooo-ribay 03-03-2015 01:43 PM

Dear Pulitzer Comittee: Please nominate Dr. Paul....blah blah blah blah :p

Is the hole an OVAL hole where the bobby pin goes through? I think I get it now. Are those pictures both SCANS? I just figured you could do whatever you did to show the union label on the bottom edge, but flip it to show the top edge.

Good luck with the Pulitzer!

springpin 03-03-2015 02:44 PM

Rob,

The hole is ROUND.

Are those images SCANS? I don't know if they are scans, photographs, or telepathic visualizations. They were sent to me by the seller of the badge. They were sufficiently clear as to convince me to buy the badge and write my column about it. I merely included those "IMAGES" in my blog. It is techno-nerds like you that increase my anxiety about using the wrong words when I write about things pertaining to electronic communication. If you still don't get it, I understand and it's OK. I don't understand how the Giants won the World Series three of the last five years. (Sorry)

Thomas Alva Muchinsky

ooo-ribay 03-03-2015 06:23 PM

HALLELUJAH!!!!! I have seen the light! Very cool.

icollectDCsports 03-03-2015 07:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by springpin (Post 1386770)
Thank you, Leon. I am sure my blog contains TMI for many readers, but I just love writing about baseball pinback buttons.

Best,

Paul

No such thing as TMI for pinbacks. The book and the blog are great. Keep 'em coming.


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