Hm. I truly don't want to "start something," but the Comoy's authorities have been caught before telling Neill a stem-related tall tale in the course of his Comoy's book research. Specifically, that their stems were fashioned from rod stock instead of molded blanks.
If Neill's blog was still up I'd link to the self-contradictory passages and photos so we could all have a laugh, but (sadly) it's not.
When I pointed it out, Neill handled the situation in the most gentlemanly way possible by not taking issue with his sources, rather, just making it clear that he was obliged to repeat what he was told exactly as it was told to him. He also left open the possibility that Comoy's might have engaged in a bit of self-serving exaggeration from time to time a la Alfred Dunhill's "dead root" briar story, or that Comoy's management were simply repeating what THEY had been told, and being "business guys" instead of "shop guys" had no reason to doubt it.
Anyway, bottom line: The only way I'll ever believe that the Comoy's white dot was perfectly center drilled a thousand times a day is to see it done with my own eyes, or be shown the hella-amazing co-axial drilling machine that was used. (A turret chuck would work in theory, but one precise enough to deliver near-100% repeatable accuracy to a few ten-thousandths on cylindrical stock of varying size and shape isn't the sort of thing pipe factories got anywhere near. Especially when a few hundred dollars would buy several year's worth of "bullseye" rod stock.)
Tool-geek out. :wink: