The home of the usb.ids file
Main -> USB Devices -> Device UD:0951 -> Subsystem UD:0951:1666
Name: DataTraveler 100 G3/G4/SE9 G2/50 Kyson
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The screen glowed in the dark of the workshop—or rather, the spare bedroom that pretended to be a workshop. On it, a man with calm hands and a precise voice was pushing a wooden lever. The router bit screamed, but what emerged from the plywood was not chaos. It was a joint . A perfect, interlocking, dovetail joint, cut with the repeatable grace of a machine from the 18th century but the soul of a digital age hacker.
The build took three weekends.
The device was called a pantorouter .
He refined his search:
He held the joint up to the light. No gaps. No glue yet. Just wood, geometry, and a free PDF from the internet. That night, he uploaded his own photos to a woodworking forum. He wrote a post titled: "Built the adjustable pantorouter from the free PDF. Here's what I learned."
The warning about slop. Tom had written a full page on "backlash" and "bearing slop." He had included a method for testing the pantorouter with a dial indicator. He had also included a joke: "If your joints are loose, it's not the router. It's you. Check your pivots." pantorouter plans free download pdf
The first link was a woodworking forum thread from 2016. The title: "Anyone built a pantorouter?" The answers were a debate between purists and pragmatists. One user, username Matthias_Wannabe , had posted a grainy image of a device made from Baltic birch and threaded rod. Below it, a link that said "Plans here (dropbox)."
It began, as many obsessions do, with a single YouTube video at 2:00 AM. 404 Error
So he did what any broke, ambitious hobbyist would do. He opened a browser and typed the sacred words into the search bar:
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