Bugsysiegals
Member
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2016
- Messages
- 908
Agreed. Maybe an adhesive rule with metric and imperial would help to ensure the math wasn’t done wrong. I just bought this one which is accurate.Just Bill said:Bugsysiegals said:The level of precision desired varies person to person. I bought the Incra fence for my table saw so I can have the highest level of precision possible. I dislike inaccuracy so much that I only use the guide rail to rough cut items to size and then run panels through the table saw to ensure panels are parallel. I wish I wasn’t so up tight about it as it’s extra effort but I know I cannot be precise with pencil lines, tape measure hooks flexing, guide rails not being exact, etc.Just Bill said:Gosh, it would never even occur to me to try and convert imperial to metric so I could use the rules to set the distance of the parallel guides to cut strips of plywood. I would simply measure and pencil mark the distance I needed on both ends of the plywood with an imperial tape, set my guide rail on the plywood so the marks are split in half by the cutting strip of the guide rail, and then set the parallel guides in place so that it was repeatable for the next cut. Done.
Maybe I am missing something?
I’m currently working on adding a threaded rod into my Incra parallel guides so they work like the Incra fence. If I can get it working like the Incra table saw fence, I’ll be able to trust ripping to final size with the TS55, have repeatable width cuts, etc.
Or maybe this level of precision is overkill for woodworking and being off by 0.5 to 1mm only matters to a few crazy people like me!!
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Yes, I agree with almost everything you say. But I’m not sure it helps solve the OP’s frustration with feeling the need to convert imperial to metric (“dang metric!”). Whether I am using imperial or metric measurements has no bearing on my accuracy and precision. If I use math to convert from one system to the other, I would be worried about introducing an extra step that probably only increases the chances of error (an error like the OP said he made by multiplying by 24.5 instead of 25.4). And once converted, I still have to measure at some point to see if my setup and cut was accurate. The level of accuracy comes from the type of measuring and marking: a tailor’s cloth tape and crayon vs. a metal hook tape measure and pencil vs. a Woodpecker steel rule and marking knife; etc. The accuracy I shoot for is always dependent on the project (I don’t shoot for the same level of accuracy when I am cutting a 2x4 to frame a wall as I do if I am cutting joinery for a wooden jewelry box). But in almost all projects, the repeatability of similar parts (precision) is usually crucial. Once set accurately, the parallel guides should provide the precision the OP is looking for.
Starrett Measure Stix, SM44ME -...https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0025Q0KAC?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
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