
Cab
An
enclosed part of a machine that houses the operator.
Cabin
Small,
one-story house, simply built possibly of logs.
Cabinet
An
enclosure or storage unit. Built-ins can
be for kitchen or other use.
Cabinet,
Base
Cabinets
that are mounted or rest on the floor and which often serve as a countertop.
The standard size for base cabinets is 34 ½ inches high and 24 inches
deep, excluding the countertop and cabinet door.
Cabinet,
Blind Corner
Cabinet
inserted into a corner with cabinets bordering it on both of the adjacent
walls. Since access to a blind cabinet is limited, the installation of
a Lazy Susan section, with revolving shelves,
improves its usefulness. Some blind cabinets are designed with faces at
a 45 degree angle to aid function.
Cabinet
Combination Saw Blade
Power
saw, which uses this circular combination, saw blade to make smooth
cuts when ripping and crosscutting wood.
Cabinet
Head Casing
Giving
the effect of a single complex molding this
elaborate trim molding for doors or windows is
constructed of two or more pieces of molding joined together along the
length.
Cabinet,
Wall
Enclosures
that are installed against a wall and off of the floor, often in a kitchen
or storage area. The standard depth of a wall cabinet is 12 inches deep,
with the width and height varying. When used in a kitchen the units are
normally installed 18 inches above the base cabinets and either extend
to the ceiling or leave some area open. Soffits
are often built above the cabinets so that the empty space is filled.
Cable
A
thick heavy rope that often contains wire strands. Alternately, a bundle
of insulated wires through which an electrical current
can be passed. Two or more conductors or
wires in the same sheath.
Cable
Box
Electrical
box used to serve as a mounting device for outlets and switches and to
protect the wire connections.
Cable
Box Connectors
Fittings
that provide a smooth passage past the edge of the box for electrical cables.
Cable
Cutter
A
device with long handles for leverage, whose jaws have curved cutting edges,
which, while similar to a bolt cutter,
is used for cutting metal rope-type cable.
Cable
Plan
Drawing
made by either an architect or designer
of electrical systems, which shows electrical terminations, cable routing
and the number of wires for each box to be used by the electrician in wiring
a building.
Cable,
Shielded
Woven
metal sheath, which provides electromagnetic
shielding by surrounding one or more insulated electrical wires.
Cable
Tap Box
Device
which is mounted on the busway and provides
a secure entryway for an electrical current
to enter the busway by permitting the connection of an electrical cable
to an electrical busway, the enclosure for the electrical bus bars or rods.
Cable
Tray
Designed
to support electrical cables where many cables
are run side by side, a cable tray is supported by a structure of which
it becomes a permanent part. Some cables trays have a solid bottom and
side rails with another type having a ladder-type bottom and side rails
and are used according to requirements.
Cable
Tray Support
Structure
that is used to restrain and support cable
trays.
Cabriole
Furniture
leg style, dating back to the early 18th century, which is often shaped
like an animal foot or claw.
Cadastral
Map
Map
within a jurisdiction, which shows the
boundary lines and ownership of all real
estate in the area.
CADD
Also
called Computer Aided
Design and Drafting it is a graphics program used on computers so that
drawing can be done in two or three dimensions with the three dimensional
designs able to be animated to be viewed from different angles, including
from the inside of the drawing. Installation or maintenance can be simulated
by the movement of various parts during animation. Animation can be used
for simulations, situation re-enactments demonstrations and education.
CADD programs can be used to design items, systems and structures of all
sizes and complexities and are increasingly used for designing or planning
construction sequences and logistics for building projects as well as landscaping
designs. Drawn to scale with dimensions shown by computer the measurements
can be taken electronically.
Cadmium-plated
Hardware
items made of steel are often coated with cadmium
to make them rust-resistant. Cadmium is more water-resistant than zinc.
Cage
Grouping
of vertical metal bars, which surround an
area or object; an enclosure of slats or bars. Alternately, a framework
of wired rebar.
Caging
Framing
around protrusions in a wall. Caisson Watertight box which surrounds a
foundation, which is being built below
water level. Alternately, a recessed ceiling
panel.
Caisson,
Bell
Caisson
pile that provides more surface bearing area by having a 60-degree
flare at the bottom.
Caisson,
Bored
Caisson
pile, with large diameter which is set
into a deep hole of 150 feet deep with a 10 foot diameter, which is used
to support a foundation of a structure
being built on soil which needs reinforcement to support the structure's
weight.
Caisson
Foundation
Foundation,
which is constructed in place by filling holes that, are drilled through
to bearing sedimentary rock, with
concrete.
Caisson,
Jacked In
Hollow
cylinder pile, which is inserted into the
soil with jacks, as it is rotated back and forth,
thus reducing friction with the soil. The
soil in the center of the cylinder is removed, once the cylinder is in
place, and is replaced with concrete to
for strengthened structural ability.
Caisson
Pile
Large
piling used to support a building or bridge by being sunk into the ground
or the body of a bed of water. Caissons are constructed of a cast-in place
concrete, which is poured into a hollow
cylinder, which has been inserted into the
ground with a pile driver. Drilled-in
caissons have the ends reinforced with a steel
shoe welded to the bottom of the cylinder.
Caisson,
Slurry
Caisson
pile created by a rectangular-shaped vertical
pit being dug and filled with concrete while
a cured concrete slurry keeps the excavation
walls held firm.
Caking
Paint
pigment solidified at the bottom of the can.
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