bushwhaker
Established Member
Somewhere i spotted SHINWA metric combination square.
Yes, this is what I mean. It is unnecessary faff and is more likely to cause me to make a mistake.I think the issue with metric/imperial rules are that you have to go to the bother of flipping the rule around. It’s not a complete write off but it is definitely a faff if you have to repeatedly alternate which way round the rule is facing.
Even with most metric only steel rules, if all of the 0s start at the same end of the rule, sometimes you have to remove the rule and flip it around. That’s what I find most useful about the Starrett ones, they lay out the markings so it can never be the wrong way round.
I looked at them but not keen as they are 306mm long for some reason and the way the scale goes is not what I am after. I do like the orange though.Look at Pretsch - German made, very good value. , well put together and not very expensive (and metric only)
It's not unknown for cheap quality tools to made in Germany (See Parkside).I would be astounded if the Presch tools like combi squares are made in Germany. They may be designed in Germany, but when they are manufactured in Germany they generally have that marked very clearly on them.
Is it worth it for the forged head? is it less likely to rust or just less likely to crack when you drop it?I have a forged steel (not the cast heads) Starrett combination set with 1' and 2' decimal/fractional imperial rules and 300mm and 600mm rules that I bought in the late 80s. They were not inexpensive by any measure but I have got my monies worth out of it and I hope to get another couple decades or more from them. Bite the bullet and get a set. It will last into the next generation.
Pete
I don't know if it is more or less likely to rust but at the time I liked the cleaner, thiner shape of the forged heads so went that way. They remain clean to this day but they have never been stored in a damp environment either.Is it worth it for the forged head? is it less likely to rust or just less likely to crack when you drop it?
looks like about £20 difference with the same rule.
I looked into this before, the company was founded in 2017 and the info I could find indicated it was a start-up with less than 20 people. From everything I could see it looked like badge engineering to me.It's not unknown for cheap quality tools to made in Germany (See Parkside).
The box Presch tools are presented in only lists their German address. If they were manufactured elsewhere I'd expect that to have to mentioned to comply with UK/EU labelling law.
I recently bought one of their squares and it's a really nice bit of kit, nicely designed and finished, but above all bang on square when tested with a M&W engineering square. I'd certainly look at their range for anything else I needed.
Good point. Mine don't have a country of manufacture marked on them, so they probably are made elsewhere. Thanks.I would be astounded if the Presch tools like combi squares are made in Germany. They may be designed in Germany, but when they are manufactured in Germany they generally have that marked very clearly on them.
Yes, it's a small new company. That doesn't mean they have to be manufacturing in the far east. I don't see you making the same accusation of Benchdogs.co.uk who are smaller and newer.I looked into this before, the company was founded in 2017 and the info I could find indicated it was a start-up with less than 20 people. From everything I could see it looked like badge engineering to me.
Isn't this the main thing? The OP wants a good quality, metric-only square. It seems to me that this is a good bet if Starrett/Mitutoyo are out of reachbut above all bang on square when tested with a M&W engineering square.
To a large degree.Isn't this the main thing?
Doesn't stop folk buying BMW - chips from China and M&S - clothes from sweatshops...To a large degree.
I can understand why some people might on ethical grounds want to buy from the most sustainable supplier or not buy from places with poor human rights records.
Sure - I'm just saying that accuracy is the main thing - not that it's the only thing. No point in its being ethical and sustainable if it doesn't workTo a large degree.
I can understand why some people might on ethical grounds want to buy from the most sustainable supplier or not buy from places with poor human rights records.
It's obviously people's choice as to who they spend their money with.Doesn't stop folk buying BMW - chips from China and M&S - clothes from sweatshops...
They sell too many things of too many differing types and techniques to be manufacturing them with the personnel they have. It is notable that the backdrop of their website has a few photos on rotation, something being forged on an anvil by hand, a bloke planing some wood, and a forklift lifting a shipping container. What's absent is any picture of a production facility, moreover nowhere do they ever state that they make in Germany, although they do (unlike Benchdogs who call themselves a distributor rather than a manufacturer) describe themselves as a manufacturer. They obviously design some stuff (and their current vacancies are for a social media graphic designer and a CAD designer) but nothing I see suggests they actually manufacture themselves.Yes, it's a small new company. That doesn't mean they have to be manufacturing in the far east. I don't see you making the same accusation of Benchdogs.co.uk who are smaller and newer.
As I said in my previous post; If it was made elsewhere it would need to state that on the packaging.
It's not that they are stupidly (Aliexpress Bangood) cheap, the squares are six times as expensive as the Parkside ones.
Bottom line is how good are the products ? I've found them very good and the reviews on Amazon are too.
Just poking at their advertising isn't helpful.I'm not knocking the tools, I have no experience of them.
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