Cheshirechappie
Established Member
Words like "accuracy", "tolerance" and "spot on" seem to mean different things to different people, depending on the trade or profession with which they are most familiar.
For someone brought up in a precision engineering environment, "spot on" is a meaningless term, because they are taught that nothing is perfect, but some things work with particular degrees of inaccuracy. For example, a machine tool fitter or inspector would be measuring to microns, and would think a spindle runout on a new machine of a couple of thousandths of an inch would be grossly unacceptable. A bricklayer, however, would be working to something like a millimetre or two for his best work, and would regard that as "spot on", because most buildings would be perfectly fit for purpose built to those limits (or even wider ones!). Neither the bricklayer nor the machine tool fitter is 'wrong' - both are working to appropriate accuracy for their work.
That tends to reflect in the comments on threads such as this - an error you can barely see is "spot on" for the building trades, but the toolmakers would want it expressed in thous or microns, because that's what their minds have been trained to do.
Trying to put numbers to try-square accuracy is perhaps a bit meaningless once you get to thous and microns, because wood isn't that precise. It could change dimension by more than that just with the change in humidity during the day. Consequently, even us engineers have to be a bit pragmatic when working wood, forget our metrology training, and accept that "fit for purpose" is good enough - as i suggested earlier, what's OK for garden decking might not be for cabinetmaking, but no woodworker needs engineering inspection grade metrology equipment!
For someone brought up in a precision engineering environment, "spot on" is a meaningless term, because they are taught that nothing is perfect, but some things work with particular degrees of inaccuracy. For example, a machine tool fitter or inspector would be measuring to microns, and would think a spindle runout on a new machine of a couple of thousandths of an inch would be grossly unacceptable. A bricklayer, however, would be working to something like a millimetre or two for his best work, and would regard that as "spot on", because most buildings would be perfectly fit for purpose built to those limits (or even wider ones!). Neither the bricklayer nor the machine tool fitter is 'wrong' - both are working to appropriate accuracy for their work.
That tends to reflect in the comments on threads such as this - an error you can barely see is "spot on" for the building trades, but the toolmakers would want it expressed in thous or microns, because that's what their minds have been trained to do.
Trying to put numbers to try-square accuracy is perhaps a bit meaningless once you get to thous and microns, because wood isn't that precise. It could change dimension by more than that just with the change in humidity during the day. Consequently, even us engineers have to be a bit pragmatic when working wood, forget our metrology training, and accept that "fit for purpose" is good enough - as i suggested earlier, what's OK for garden decking might not be for cabinetmaking, but no woodworker needs engineering inspection grade metrology equipment!