So obvious when you think about it
Was reading one of the latest woodworking magazines, and one of his tips was:
"when working on a project use only one tape measure" Because no two tape measures are identical especially at the ends where one may have been bent.
Maybe this is why some of my jobs just aren't quite right. :D
Anyhow there's the tip.
Only measure when you have to!
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Mini
Use a tape measure as the last resort. A rule or story stick are far more accurate and with a story stick you don't translate the reading to something else in your head and cut the thing too short. I don't know how many times I have read a tape wrongly and cut short.
I agree with mini... For many things, the exact measurement is not always important but rather that all the parts are consistent with each other. go the story stick!. I prefer a long steel rule and if using a tape measure always use the same one and tend to start at 100mm but it is important to measure atleast twice (even more when tired at the end of the day!):doh:
Isn't it strange that cutting mistakes always seem to end up short????? (mabe they are the ones we remember as the long ones get recut and endup right anyway)
Saw the strangest thing at school yesterday... I have just started teaching a year 9 woodwork class and discovered that they had been taught to cut their timber 2-5 mm longer and then sand it to length on a large disc sander!!!! Makes a really interesting fit up with out of square and rounded ends!
Chipman