niall Y
Established Member
I've just finished cutting to size a whole pile of Ash boards, for a triangular shelving unit - well more of a ziggurat to be honest. I was cutting to length the last-but-one board, and even though I measured twice, I still cut it too short! Fancy that.... well that's not what I said when I realised the mistake. I'd struggled manfully get the job out of the material I have - so this was the "last straw".
My excuse, if I need one, is that I picked up the wrong tape. I know it sounds ridiculous, but I have a real problem with some of the metric tapes. Those that after 10 cm , have the the subsequent centimetres as 11, 12, 13,etc. I can get on with. Those that have the subsequent centimetres marked 1, 2, 3, I'm more prone to make mistakes with. The length in question was 1102 mm, which I wrongly marked as 1012 - all of the right numbers, but in the wrong order!
To put this in context, I'm someone who has earned a living from woodwork, for the last 40 odd years, including lots of site-work. However, I'm still prone to making these sort of mistakes. The ones that i'm most wary of are those that arise from reading the tape upside down - all those 6's and 9's can easily be confused!
My excuse, if I need one, is that I picked up the wrong tape. I know it sounds ridiculous, but I have a real problem with some of the metric tapes. Those that after 10 cm , have the the subsequent centimetres as 11, 12, 13,etc. I can get on with. Those that have the subsequent centimetres marked 1, 2, 3, I'm more prone to make mistakes with. The length in question was 1102 mm, which I wrongly marked as 1012 - all of the right numbers, but in the wrong order!
To put this in context, I'm someone who has earned a living from woodwork, for the last 40 odd years, including lots of site-work. However, I'm still prone to making these sort of mistakes. The ones that i'm most wary of are those that arise from reading the tape upside down - all those 6's and 9's can easily be confused!