A dividing head plate is calibrated for 40 turns per revolution, not 90, so to use one in a straightforward way... no. But on some divisions, it can still be useful with a little math - perhaps an engineer?
On a dividing head like mine I have to disnegage the clockwork to use dividing plates. On both my RT's the worm gear is always engaged, both plates and manual handle...
I think I 'spoke' poorly in my above post on the matter. Sigh. English! sorry. I think I said it backwards!
No worries..... Backwards usually works too...... Lol!
In my case, the worm gear seems to disengage and works as @Brent H suggests.
I think that means I just replace the handwheel with the dividing system.
A mathematician wouldn't bother with a dividing disk. They would just add the increment to the previous number and dial it in. Non-mathematicians can't do that because they can't handle addition in a base 60 numbering system. Assuming that is correct, I'd prefer to avoid mistakes which is what the dividing disks are supposed to do. (I think).
Why can't both trig, time and number bases all be in octal?
Which reminds me of another story. When one of my previous bosses retired, I was tasked with getting him a good gag gift. He was a member of Canada's metrication committee (the dummies who believed the US would follow Canada's lead and go metric too.). He was also an avid clock maker.
I decided to get him a metric clock. 10 hours in a day, 10 minutes in an hour, 10 seconds in a minute, etc.
There were none. Apparently the decimal base system doesn't apply to time or angles. Go figure!
So I designed a kit and bought all the gears and parts needed to make one and that's what we gave him! I don't know if he ever built it. Didn't matter. It was hilarious.
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