Yes Ron that would work but it is currently unavailable and I spent all my money on Festool.
Rmw there is no adjustment once everything is glued together. I basically built mine as per the article but I made a spacer bar to index the two holes. Sorry I have no photo sequence now but I will describe it and do photos tomorrow. This whole thing works on solving a triangle math problem. The given info is one 90 deg angle a fixed hypotenuse an you supply the angle you are looking for. The sine of the angle times the length of the hypotenuse equals the height of the 90 deg leg, or the gage block. A 10 inch sine bar work well for woodworking because it is big enough to actually register a fence. And the math is easy you just move the decimal on the answer for sine. It does not matter what size disc is used but they have to be the same I used 3/4 inch. Strive for a 10 inch spacing. I made a 10 inch spacer so I could drill one hole with a fence and stop then insert the spacer and drill the second hole. When the discs are in the holes measure them and see how you did. I was 5 thou. off but felt that was acceptable ( the math showed the gage blocks when rounded to thousandths would be the same). But if you ended up with 9 and 57/64 who cares that just becomes your multiplier instead of moving the dec. If I were to build another I would first clamp the discs to a piece of wood with small clamps and adjust them so they were a perfect 10 inches apart on center. Then I would drill the holes as described above then cut the shape so you can slide it past the clamps over the discs. Hopefully it will slide right on if not, gently sand the holes till it does. Once it fits mix some epoxy and glue them in place. The piece of wood the discs are clamped to should be protected from being glued with everything else. When the epoxy has cured run the discs against the fence of a router table or table saw to true up the other side parallel with the discs. Except for some final trimming to have the needed clearance at the discs you are god to go. I use the calipers for a quick set up or to measure and cut a permanent gage block, but that can be another post. Let me know if this doesn't make sense.