VK, why don't you clamp a machinist's square to the bottom of your block so you have a hard stop for the tool? Then when you move it just keep it tight to the stop and reclamp it. That would have to be better than eyeballing it?
bracketracer said:VK, why don't you clamp a machinist's square to the bottom of your block so you have a hard stop for the tool? Then when you move it just keep it tight to the stop and reclamp it. That would have to be better than eyeballing it?
Vitamin K said:It seems like we could MINIMIZE reclamping misalignment problems by starting out by choosing one side of the wood block to be our reference edge and drawing, perpendicular to that edge, a line across the block at the spot where the edge of the axle guide would rest. Then, we clamp on one side, with the spacer, and drill our canted hole. Then, when the time comes to move the spacer and reclamp the guide, we refer to our perpendicular line, trusting it to line up the axle guide, as opposed to the other edge of the wood block.
Thank you Sir!Yes - but "without the reclamping" is a critical difference. Actually, its *the* critical difference.