Bought a new angle indicator.

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    Found the little sucker! Another deeper drawer but I missed it first two times I looked.
    going to take it out of the nylon case so it fits in my marking and measuring stuff drawer where it belongs.
    Last edited by LCHIEN; 07-14-2020, 05:35 PM.

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    Originally posted by Carlos
    My angle finders stay out where I can see them. Not that I use them a LOT, but I know if they are visible I'll be more likely to use them. One is by the TS so that I don't get lazy, and it makes me remember to check for perfection every time I move the blade.
    I looked there. Next to the drill press, next to the table saw, in case I decided to keep it by the tool. But, not there.
    $16 maybe I'll just buy a new one.

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  • Carlos
    replied
    My angle finders stay out where I can see them. Not that I use them a LOT, but I know if they are visible I'll be more likely to use them. One is by the TS so that I don't get lazy, and it makes me remember to check for perfection every time I move the blade.

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    The thing is, the tool was in the same place for 15-20 years. Moved it because the new one didn't fit, but I can't think/recall whatever logic I used to pick a different drawer (except 1/2" or more deeper). My brain says it must be in the drawer it was in for so long.

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  • cwsmith
    replied
    Oh the anguish of anyone who uses tools in their lives.

    Where is it? Where did it go? How is it I don't remember... I know I put it right where I could find it! Honey, you didn't by any chance borrow it did you? (She has no idea what it is, much less a need to use it... but ask her anyway.)

    The search is endless, and is terminated only because there might just be things that you forgot you even had. I think that the first day Man picked up a stone or a stick to use it as a tool, he spent the second day wondering where he left it. I know that decades I've been a tool owner, there has always been that question... "Where did I put that?" As a result, I own a half-dozen plus tape measure, countless screwdrivers, pliers, and even I can't guess at where my pens, pencils, and other daily-use paraphernalia goes to.

    With me, I often find the object a day or two (sometime even an hour or two) after I stop looking. Then of course there's the buy-another-one remedy, which often turns up the lost one, soon there after; and, of course there is the remote possibility that the missing item just got transported to a different reality, universe, or time dimension (something to do with quantum physics, alien abduction, or whatever. Life is a wonderment and full of mysteries!

    Or maybe by the time you read this, you have found it once again,

    CWS

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    OK, I'm so pissed. Bought this 8 months ago and to replace the WIxey I had for 15+ years.
    I can't find it. I was going to put it in the same rulers/t-squares drawer where I keep all t he measuring and marking stuff. and that's the first place I looked.
    But I remember now it came with a nice ballistic nylon fitted case that was a little too thick for that drawer. So I put it somewhere else. Can't remember where that somewhere else is.

    Steamed!!!!

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  • Carlos
    replied
    I have two of these, they are not used often, but so useful when they are. Like Carl, I like it for resetting the TS and SCMS back to zero. I've also used mine to do a front end alignment on the Jeep, as caster and cross-caster angle make a huge difference. I've never had battery issues with them, unlike the calipers which are constantly dead because they use power all the time. My HF welding mask must not use power most of the time either, as it gets a new battery less often than every five years (which makes me realize, I'm old, and it's over 20 years old).

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  • capncarl
    replied
    Simular battery situation with my auto darkening welding hood.... I guess the design engineer thought everyone kept their hood in a completely dark cabinet where the factory installed button batteries in a plastic welded up box last 2 years. Leave the hood where it detects fluorescent light and it may be only months before your $150 hood is just a wall decoration. I cut the plastic case apart and tapped into the battery connectors and installed a remote AA battery pack so I could pop out the batteries when not in use. **** a bunch of cheap engineering.

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    I might point out that in the past I've take a microammeter to the digital calipers and found that the current drawn when off is virtually the same as when on. The only real function of the on-off button seems to be the display.

    Second guessing the engineers who made the chip used probably in all these things, but they apparently wanted to keep the zero or offset readings so that if the jaws moved it would keep track of them. Anyway that's the effect. Unfortunately while the power consumption is low it still draws enough to run the battery down over a relatively short time compared to the shelf life of the battery.

    I wouldn't be surprised if the same basic idea was used in these inclinometers and the power is still on. The lithium cells in my old Wixey seemed to be dead every time I sent to use it.

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  • mm1992
    replied
    Originally posted by leehljp
    It seems that I only needed to use it at the point the batteries fail. Same for my calipers!
    The one thing I've found about these devices is that if I want the batteries to last, I need to remove them when I'm not using it. If I leave my batteries in my calipers, it sure loves to eat them.

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  • capncarl
    replied
    I like using this kind of angle finder to set the angle of the blades on my table saw and sliding miter saw, no fighting with the teeth on the blade.

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  • leehljp
    replied
    Ahh! The little "up/down arrow". That is what I must have missed on the level. The carpenter just kept saying "if it is within .2 of vertical, that is OK." My problem was that at that level of accuracy, I could not tell which way the stud needed to lean or be tapped once it was within .5 or even 1 degree off without having to look at the bubble. I couldn't find a reference point on the digital level for which way to move it.

    (BTW, the carpenter was a stickler for perfection and code, which I liked. (We were building a church). So everything had to be precise.)

    Thanks for posting this as I have an older indicator that uses the button batteries. It seems that I only needed to use it at the point the batteries fail. Same for my calipers! Going back about a little over year ago, I started buying and keeping packs of button batteries on hand. I think I have three packs now. But I still like using AA and AAA as they seem to last longer.
    Last edited by leehljp; 12-07-2019, 08:51 AM.

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    Don't overthink the angle indicator.

    There's a little up/down arrow to the right. Basically it points the direction you need to raise the right side to move it towards zero. When its perfectly level it shows a straight line and says "0".

    As for the .01 degree, it has what us measurement guys call resolution but no accuracy. In fact the accuracy spec says 0.1 degree.
    I set it on a pretty flat granite top, same place and it reads ,29 degrees, When I move it and set it repeatedly int he same spot I get valuse from ,25 to ,29. So the repeatability is only +/-.2 and I don't know what the actual is. The spec claims 0.1 degree, I assume that means +/- 0.1 degree I really don't have a more accurate reference to verify that over the whole range.
    Last edited by LCHIEN; 12-07-2019, 01:59 AM.

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  • leehljp
    replied
    Originally posted by LCHIEN
    Its functional. For small angles it tells you which way its tilting, if you can't quite tell.
    For me, the way that they show the angle tilt is unintuitive to me. The bottom line should start at the other end to exactly reflect the actual angle from horizontal. I had to use a digital level a few weeks ago putting up about 150 studs in a building. I was assisting a carpenter who loved his digital level. It was totally counter intuitive to me every time. I had to quit looking at that and watch the old school bubble. I could never tell by the screen if I was a degree off to one side or the other. And I was far more accurate with the bubble.

    If that digital level would let me calibrate it from the direction and end, it would have worked much better.

    BTW, I think I would like the one in that is posted, as I have one that only shows up in tenths of a degree, which is not good enough for segmented bowls. I realize that it won't do miters but some segment cuts can be done with bevels, which the .01 would be GREAT.

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  • LCHIEN
    replied
    Its functional. For small angles it tells you which way its tilting, if you can't quite tell.

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