Price: $39.99
(as of Sep 26, 2024 23:38:32 UTC – Details)
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Ruler and jigs
Product Dimensions : 5 x 4 x 0.1 inches; 12.87 ounces
Date First Available : January 31, 2024
Manufacturer : GOINGMAKE
ASIN : B0CTMXD146
Country of Origin : China
【Accurate Square and Fast Work】GOINGMAKE woodworking carpenter square tool can easily draw and check square and measuring angle from 0-90 degree. Easy for woodworker for drawing and layout. Hole position scribing and quick angle position help you increase your working efficiency and provides a precise result.
【Easy Precision Hole Scrbing Ruler】GOINGMAKE woodworking square layout measuring ruler help you draw line with hole position scribing with 1/16″ graduations. Precision hole make line drawing no error and fits for most of woodworking pencils.
【Clear and Durable Engraving Scales】GOINGMAKE square are engraved durable and clear scales. Woodworking square ruler can easily read and draw lines with accurate scales.
【Quick Angle Measuring】GOINGMAKE 3D multi angle measuring ruler designes angle positioning holes and provides fixed angle pin. You can draw angle lines more quickly with quick angle holes from 22.5/30/45/60/67.5 degree. You can also drawing precise 0-90° angle line with scale marking.
【Durable and Larger Size】GOINGMAKE woodworking ruler are made of high quality aluminum alloy. Upgrade 4 x 5 inch larger size for more convenient drawing. Our 4 inch carpenter square is also compact for use. Fits for most standard and larger lumber.
4.5
Reviewer: K. Williams
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: It’s a carpenter’s tri-square.
Review: It works as advertised, is very high quality, and the white etched white on black is very easy to read. These are cheaper than similar aluminum squares. It is Chinese, if that matters to you.
Reviewer: Geek4eye
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Yes, you want one of these. You will use it.
Review: I knew as soon as I saw the listing that I wanted to have one. Oh! Yeah!I can’t say how many times over the years I’ve wanted to mark both the side+edge of a object (boards, bars, extrusions, etc., even pipes) and had to fight with a combo square to get the lines to intersect. This lets me do it in one pass, no fuss, right on. Works on irregular shapes that are hard to “eyeball”. For various reasons I wind up hand cutting things a lot, and it really helps to have guides marked all around.It did take me a bit to grok the blue pin (didn’t see it in the bottom of the box at first). RMDNNSI (real men don’t need no stinkin’ instructions). Turns out it is described in the little manual and on this web listing. It allows you to firmly set those common angles without having to squint at the scale and hoping it doesn’t slip and move before you mark it.What they didn’t say and seems rather cool is that you also get another angle off of the far side that is 45° from the close side (which is 90° without the pin). So to calculate what that angle is, you add 45° to it.+ For example, if you set the pin to 60°, that is the angle on the front (right) edge. The back (left) edge is then is 60° + 45° = 105° to the left or 75° under the square, or minus 90° = 15° off vertical.+ So for all the holes, it would be: front back (right) (left – under) 22.5° 67.5° 112.5° 30.0° 75.0° 105.0° 45.0° 90.0° 90.0° 60.0° 105.0° 75.0° 67.5° 112.5° 67.5°The first couple are pretty short, and the 45° yielding 90° seems redundant, but it might be useful in tight corners where the whole scale wouldn’t fit square.The pinholes for scribing lines are on 1/16″ centers. I typically use cheap 0.7mm mechanical pencils, and that works fine. The holes are a bit larger than that, so 0.9mm or 1.0mm would probably be just fine.If I was going to machine one of these things, there is just one *very* minor change I’d make: When the square is sitting straight up, there is a nice right angle in the base plate that can be marked. For some reason, they relieved the corner with an 8mm cylindrical hole. This allows the pencil/pen/scribe to get all the way inside the vertex on the corner, but it seems excessive – it forms a loop instead of a point. I’d rather it was a cone shaped hole that was 1-2mm at the bottom and 8mm at the top. This would allow a precise 90° corner marking while still leaving room for the pencil/etc.Bottom line: I’m delighted with it and it will save me a lot of time, fuss and bother in the future.
Reviewer: Paul A. Brailey
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Solid Well Made Porduct
Review: I received this product a day ago and began to immediately use it in my workshop. It has made doing certain markup tasks so much easier. Product seems well made, solid construction, no flex. Compared the measurement lines to several other rulers, squares in my shop. All lines match exactly, especially to the precise rulers. The square appears 90 degrees in all sections that it should. So far no complaints, very happy with the product. Price is affordable.
Reviewer: Rodimus
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: A really nice, sturdy addition to my tools
Review: This square is small but is very useful.It feels pretty rugged in my hand, and I don’t worry about dinging it on other tools.It is small enough to fit in my toolbox, or to carry from job to job if needed.I am very happy to have this in my kit.
Reviewer: The Dude
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: accurate and gets the job done
Review: Great, handy little tool to have around when measuring cuts. it’s accurate
Reviewer: Amanda
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Solid
Review: This thing is built solid. There is no doubt it is great construction and will last for a long time. It is accurate with the measurements and has no imperfections in the casting. It is easy to read and use and just gets the job done .
Reviewer: Josh
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Super Handy
Review: As a person with a lot of maintenance experience, I know the importance of having the right tools. What I didn’t realize until I found this is that there was a more “right” square than my standard, one-dimensioned speed squares (I know, that’s not truly correct, but I think you get the gist.)This square is well-made, easy to read, accurate, and it isn’t as bulky as I expected. The angle “stops” with the drop pin are really convenient and are a feature you’d normally only see on much more expensive options. That being said, I think this (and anything more expensive) is priced higher than its value. If you’re doing a lot of consistent work and need a square that you can rely on to last on the job site and be accurate, this is certainly a good choice without breaking the bank
Reviewer: Jerry
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: The tool I never knew I needed
Review: This carpenter square offers a lot of versatility that the square I’ve used for many years does not offer. The two things that stand out to me are the blue peg for marking specific angles (22.5, 30, 45, 60 & 67.5), and the holes for marking lines at 16th inch increments. Then there is the depth square should you need to know how thick a piece of wood is.In addition to the five holes for using the angle peg, there are also markings for angles every 5 degrees from 5 through 75; you just don’t have the peg to hold the angle in position and must hold it manually. While the blue peg is a nifty idea, I worry that it will get lost sooner than later; at least it’s blue so it should stand out more easily if it gets dropped.The holes for marking 1/16 inch increments are small and require a mechanical pencil to use since the metal is 1/8″ thick. I can’t use my pen with them, and a wooden pencil is questionable.This will come in handy the next time I need to build something; it would have been great to have a year ago when I was cutting several trim pieces at 45 degree angles.One thing that impressed me was the manual. It is written in good English providing clear explanations of how to use it, includes color pictures, and is only in English (not six different languages). The font is also big enough to read without needing reading glasses.GOINGMAKE also makes a smaller version of this same tool. The one I have is 4×5, which is good for working with 2x4s and larger wood. They also make a smaller one that is 3×4 for smaller cuts of wood and trim. The small size seems priced right at $20. Given this price, it seems like this larger model should be priced at $30 instead of $40.