Cheshirechappie
Established Member
MikeG.":1e3amf90 said:Too many moving parts to take that seriously. If the surface of the table is fractionally bowed, for example........
True - except that in a toolroom, all measuring equipment and reference surfaces are checked, and their inaccuracy is KNOWN. That's why metrology equipment is usually supplied against one of three grades - Workshop, Inspection and Calibration. There is a higher grade, which is comparison against the national reference standard, but that hardly needs to concern us! Obviously, there tends to be a difference in the time needed to make a measuring instrument that meets each higher grade of precision, with a consequent increase in cost - hence the price Andy Kev noted for a certified M&W square - someone had to check each square against calibration equipment and detrmine that the inaccuracy was within that specified for the grade of square, and fill in the certificate that goes with the individual square.
All very interesting in passing - but it's not really woodworking, is it!