BuckeyeDennis wrote: Actually, I don't enjoy tedious stuff either. And I pretty much detest repetitive work.![]()
But I do enjoy designing fixtures and processes that make precision quick and easy. Instead of tedious. In fact, I'd argue that when such things are well designed, precision cuts are faster than mediocre cuts done the usual way.![]()
As for whether or not the accuracy of the Woodpeckers gauge is overkill for woodworking, I think not. Any error in your measuring instruments is only one contributor to the total accumulated error in the final workpiece. So unless you enjoy futzing around fine-tuning fits after the initial cut, your instruments should be at least twice as accurate as your goal for the workpiece. Or better yet, 10 times as accurate. Which is where I think this gauge fits in. It basically eliminates measuring-instrument accuracy from the angle-tolerance equation.
Such tools do fit well in my philosophy of "Never measure if you can superimpose"...
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