rivet point - Definition. Was ist rivet point
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Was (wer) ist rivet point - definition

NAVAL FOLKLORE
Gold rivet

Élise Rivet         
  • Élise Rivet
ROMAN CATHOLIC NUN AND HOLOCAUST VICTIM
Elise Rivet; Mère Marie Élisabeth de l'Eucharistie
Élise Rivet, also known as Mère Marie Élisabeth de l'Eucharistie (January 19, 1890, Draria, Algeria – March 30, 1945, Ravensbrück concentration camp, Germany) was a Roman Catholic nun and World War II heroine. Rivet volunteered to go to the gas chamber, in place of a mother, in the German concentration camp of Ravensbrück.
Point-to-point (telecommunications)         
  • A point-to-point wireless unit with a built-in antenna at [[Huntington Beach, California]]
COMMUNICATIONS CONNECTION BETWEEN TWO NODES OR ENDPOINTS
Point-to-point communication; Point to point communications; Point-to-point link; Point-to-point telecommunications; Point-to-point communication (telecommunications); Point-to-Point Link; Point-to-Point link; Point to point communication; One-to-one (communication); Point-to-point radio link; Point-to-point connection
In telecommunications, a point-to-point connection refers to a communications connection between two communication endpoints or nodes. An example is a telephone call, in which one telephone is connected with one other, and what is said by one caller can only be heard by the other.
rivet         
  • Three aluminium blind rivets: 1/8", 3/32", and 1/16"
  • Sophisticated riveted joint on a railway bridge
  • Impact method for solid rivet and semi-tubular rivets
  • An original structural steel rivet from the [[Golden Gate Bridge]] (1937). Removed and replaced c. 2000 during work to reinforce the structure to resist seismic loads.
  • M3 tank]] hull
  • Oscar rivet shown with mandrel (dashed lines depict flare/flange after installation)
  • Women rivet heaters, with their tongs and catching buckets, [[Puget Sound Navy Yard]], May 1919
  • Pop rivet gun with rivet inserted
  • Animation of a rivet being tightened (necked area of mandrel not shown)
  • Detail of a 1941 riveted ship hull, with the rivets clearly visible
  • Riveting team working on the cockpit shell of a [[C-47]] transport at the plant of [[North American Aviation]]. The woman on the left operates an air hammer, while the man on the right holds a bucking bar.
  • SS ''John W. Brown'']] (December 2014).
  • A riveted [[truss bridge]] over the [[Orange River]]
  • A typical [[technical drawing]] of a universal head solid rivet
  • Spitfire]] aircraft
  • A typical technical drawing of an oval head semi-tubular rivet
PERMANENT MECHANICAL FASTENER
Rivets; Riveting; Solid rivet; Blind rivet; Pop rivet; Pop rivets; Flush rivet; Self-Pierce Riveting; Pop-riveted; Riveter; Weldless iron; Blind rivets; Flush riveted; Bucking bar; Rivetting; High-strength structural steel rivets; High-strength structural steel rivet; POP rivet; Riveted; Rivetted
n. to drive a rivet (into metal)

Wikipedia

Golden rivet

A Golden Rivet refers to the claim in naval folklore that every ship is built containing a single, commemorative "golden rivet", an idea seemingly derived from the commemorative golden spike that was temporarily driven at the completion of the U.S. transcontinental railroad in 1869.