Looking into levels, the consensus points to Stabila being the most accurate, durable. I searched the forum, seems various opinions about the various Stabila styles. I would welcome any other opinions?
Cheers.
Cheers.
That was certainly how the old ones use to be. I know of two new 83S's that haven't been accurate. I covered over the offending bubble so it didn't get used by accident.Trevanion":m6i226xr said:Has to be the Stabila 83S type, absolutely flat and dead-accurate, feels great to use with a bit of heft to it, you won't ever need another set of levels if you buy these and look after them.
Trevanion":8yh15drt said:you won't ever need another set of levels if you buy these and look after them.
OK hadn't thought of doing that.phil.p":1eu675d5 said:Don't just test them for being straight, test them for actually working as levels - if something shows as being level, reverse the spirit level and it should still show as being level.
phil.p":12qxaryg said:Don't just test them for being straight, test them for actually working as levels - if something shows as being level, reverse the spirit level and it should still show as being level.
Thanks again, will doMikeG.":2edhnxh8 said:phil.p":2edhnxh8 said:Don't just test them for being straight, test them for actually working as levels - if something shows as being level, reverse the spirit level and it should still show as being level.
The best way to do this is to prop one end on something against a wall, and move it to level. Mark under the un-propped end with a pencil line where you can't see it without bending down. Flip the level over and repeat. If you've got two separate lines, your level isn't accurate (and horizontal is exactly half way between the two marks).
MikeG.":24794sjz said:I once took a bricky's level (and line) off him, and told him to build a fireplace by eye. I wanted it looking wonky. It still ended up perfectly level......
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