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positioning was known to within 0.01 mm; because of this they
could also be moved in relation to the vertical by means of
special ly-designed micro-metric screws. Moreover, the wires
themselves were held tanght by a 5 Kg weight immersed in a
container of oil to absorb the vibrations.
In Fig, 1 there is a plan and section diagram of the equi
pment just referred to, and the relative positioning of the
individual pegs.
To determine the spatial co-ordinates of these, ‘we have
had to work solely with a series of distance measurements bet
ween the brass pegs using a method already described in the
afore-mentioned publication (3). In this way we set up a spa-
tial frame independent of the model to be studied (which obviou
sly had to be placed in a vertical position). Previously, tests
had been done outside our laboratory using an independent refe
rence system, implemented with "Johnson" blocks mounted on a
reference table; in this case the model studied was placed di
rectey on the table.
Given the impossibility, at the moment, of setting up this
equipment in our laboratory, we have not been able to experi-
ment with it in depth, though it seems to us to be the more ap
propriate and more accurate solution.
The objects examined were:
a) a model of a part of a car body, to a scale of 1.1, made of
hardened resin;
b) a model in sheet metal, also to a scale of 1.1, of the left
front mudguard of a Fiat 125.
The dimensions of model (b) are: 110 cm x 60 cm, with a
maximum width of 13 cm. The sheet metal model was tightly fixed,
with a number of specially-placed small connecting-rods, to a
plate made up of a panel of two joined sheets of wood, hardened
and pressed to a thickness of exactly 2.5 cm and having dimen-
sions of 130 cm x 80 cm.