Pete Maddex":15taqy7g said:
These are good
http://www.trenddirectuk.com/dar-200.html or an equivalent. but as custard said a compass works.
One of the best tips is to glue up in two half's then trim the ends to fit.
Pete
Ditto on the two halves thing...
... but... I had one of those digital angle gauges, and it wasn't correct. I didn't realise until long after I bought it (didn't actually get to use it for a long while), and it was too late to return it.
I now have a Gem Red one (oddly, on the desk next to the keyboard at the moment), which seems to be fine,
as I am able to measure it. That said, the pivot isn't central to the arms, so it still fails a 180 test (for practical purposes).
I'm sure they all come out of the same factory, just with differing pass-fail quality standards. I dismantled the faulty one and discovered the electronic "protractor" inside (which it uses to count pulses) was mounted visibly off-centre. I strongly recommend testing these things carefully before relying on them (and the electro-magnetic "bevel box" levels for sticking onto tablesaw blades).
In the case of the hinged angle gauge things, mark out 30, 60, 90, 45 degrees with a compass and check
all round the circle (any error should reverse at some point). They also rely on the parallel nature of the two edges of each arm, and the two arms being of identical thickness - also worth measuring as accurately as you can, as any differences in the two arms will affect accuracy in daily use (e.g. you mustn't try to zero at 180, because there's a parallel offset).
It's useful, but the design of the things (from whomsoever you buy them, and whichever brand they are) is deeply flawed, and I certainly don't trust mine - I use it more as a mitre gauge than a measuring tool.
E.
PS: It's similar to the introduction of digital meters in electronics years ago - just because the display has a decimal point it doesn't mean the instrument is reading correctly. I have three DMMs and two moving coil meters. One DMM is lab quality (HP3478A, which I have reason to trust), one moving coil meter is an AVO 8. Every single one of them reads differently, and has errors in different ways, and crucially none of the DMMs (bar the lab one) are adjustable.