Books are fun-damental

Author Alan Richter
Published
September 01, 2015 - 10:30am

It’s been a number of years since CTE published its Literature Review section, in part because we started to receive so few announcements about printed literature as more companies transitioned to electronic media. Because I’m old-school, I find it fortunate that publishers still print books. I recently received three new ones for review.

One is “The Habit of Labor: Lessons from a Life of Struggle and Success” by Stef Wertheimer. Published by Overlook Duckworth, New York and London, the founder of Iscar recounts the significant events in his life, such as fleeing Nazi Germany in December 1936, traveling to what was then Palestine in February 1937, the growth of the cutting tool company he founded in 1952 and eventually sold to Warren Buffet, his family life, his development of industrial parks and his new Marshall Plan for industrialization of the Middle East.

As the title implies, work plays a central role in Wertheimer’s life. He recalled how, while recovering in a hospital from a life-threatening car crash, he was later told of trying to get out of bed while still in a coma, requiring the nurses to tie him down. “One time, still unconscious, I got up on my feet, with the bed tied to my back,” he wrote. “Apparently my desire to return to work and home was so strong that it gave me this power.”

After covering the cutting tool industry for more than 15 years and visiting the facilities of numerous major toolmakers, it’s hard to imagine someone starting a cutting tool company as humbly as Wertheimer did and growing it to such a prominent position in today’s market. But after reading “The Habit of Labor,” I feel an entrepreneur who has the proper balance of ambition, skills, appetite for risk and luck can do it.

Another fascinating read was “International System of Units (SI): How the World Measures Almost Everything, and the People who Made it Possible” by metalcutting consultant Dr. Edmund Isakov and published by Industrial Press Inc., South Norwalk, Conn. Originally issued as an ebook a few years ago, the book is about the metric system, which not only includes SI base units of measurements, such as meter, kilogram and second, but also SI-derived units of measurements, such as tesla for measuring magnetic flux density.

No Isakov work is complete without a healthy serving of mathematical equations, and this book is no exception. However, I particularly enjoyed the biographies of the scientists and inventors after whom the metric units are named. For example, the unit of Celsius temperature, degree Celsius, is named after Anders Celsius, an astronomer who was the first to suggest a connection between the lights of the aurora borealis and changes in Earth’s magnetic field.

It’s unfortunate that the U.S. is the only major industrial country to not adopt the elegant metric system, but the book was written with the hope and prediction that the “metric bridge” between the U.S. and the rest of the world will be established in the near future.

Speaking of equations, “Drills: Science and Technology of Advanced Operations” by mechanical engineer Viktor P. Astakhov is full of them, as well as photos, illustrations and text about holemaking tools. I admit I didn’t read this book cover to cover, but at nearly 900 pages, it’s more of a reference than a casual read. Published by CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fla., it’s likely the most thorough source of information about the history, design and application of drills.

Although CTE doesn’t regularly “review” company literature, books are well-received. CTE

Related Glossary Terms

  • metalcutting ( material cutting)

    metalcutting ( material cutting)

    Any machining process used to part metal or other material or give a workpiece a new configuration. Conventionally applies to machining operations in which a cutting tool mechanically removes material in the form of chips; applies to any process in which metal or material is removed to create new shapes. See metalforming.

Author

Editor-at-large

Alan holds a bachelor’s degree in journalism from Southern Illinois University Carbondale. Including his 20 years at CTE, Alan has more than 30 years of trade journalism experience.