This is neither negative nor positive. Just what I found and what I did. Firstly I suspect they were assembled by an unskilled worker who edited the pattern ie 1 bearing 2 spacer 3 small washer 4 black spacer 5 small washer 5 yellow bracket 6 black spacer 7 small washer 8 yellow bracket etc. Repeat, until you reach the end, add the black washer and nut. No two parts have the same diameters differing by 2-4 thousand except for the black spacers which were dead. Carbide cutters were probably swapped out and come in 3 different types. Milling cutter and square on one side 2,3,4,5 and 6 are basically the same plus or minus. They're probably steamed at the factory. and more or less fused with the yellow holders. The carbide tips are blunt indicating they were roughly machined at the dealer. probably reassembled the part and noticed that the distance between the tips differed by 10,000 (probably due to the small thickness of the washer and the deviation of the yellow nozzle holder). reasonable interval. Overall, we managed to hold 0.003. Put it on my router table and it will make a nice clean cut. This is not Freudian in my opinion, but suitable for most applications. When you take it apart, be sure to tighten the nut. If it's not REALLY tight, the bits will tend to turn.
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