woodbutcherbower said:
I have absolutely no idea what 1/16th or 1/32nd of an inch actually looks like. Not a clue.
Ok, for me:
1/32" => 1 mm, i.e. way off
Eye markings are up to about 0.5 mm cummulative accuracy (aka 1/64" in americanese) when two errors, each of 0.2mm are put together.
The PGs and in general the FS/2 + TS system can do repeatability up to about 0.1 mm error (roughly 1/256"), with about 0.2mm achievable in most cases. *)
*) With Makita tracks having a bit lower straightness standard, that goes to about twice as bad - 0.2 mm tops / 0.4 mm usual as the practical accuracy achievable.
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Something went wrong with my previous post, so will retry but shorter:
From photos by Cheese it seems your current etching is done such the "major scale" marks are
different width than the "minor scale" ones. This is wrong as it prevents referencing the edge of the mark - as is the engineering best practice when accuracy is concerned.
When multiple scales are used, the "major" scale can use longer marks, but they must not be wider. Right now, when the user calibrates, in effect if doing it right he has to calibrate differently depending if the major scale is to be used or the minor scale. That is not good. And is pretty easy to fix.
And what is even worse is the variable-width etching guides the user to (try) reading the center of the mark instead of the edge of it. Which is the worst possible scenario for
accurately precisely reading a scale.