Swanson Speed Square Manual Español
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Swanson speed square manual español Continue Specification Asset Sizes (v.)-7.25 x 7 x .875Packed with 44-page Swanson® Blue Book In this tutorial, we're going to take a quick look at the speed of the area, a tool that you may already have but can't fully understand. While made to frame carpentry, square speed can be indispensable in many measurement and marking situations. Let's see. What is Speed Square? A speed square (aka a sling square or triangle square) is a measurement of a multi-tool. Made of steel, aluminum or plastic, this common carpenter tool combines a ruler, try square, protractor, line-cutting tool, overall width of board break manual, and saw guide for making exact 90 and 45 incisions with a hand or circular saw. The speed of the square basic uses as a try square, for a quick measurement of the line perpendicular to the edge of the board (hence the square in the title), as miter area, for accurate marking of 45 angles, and as a protractor, for easy to find and marking various common angles, especially roof rafters and angles for ladder stringers (vertical fulities on stairs). The high- speed area was invented in 1925 by Albert Swanson. Swanson was a carpenter in a small town outside Chicago. He wanted to create a device to make it easier to quickly identify the resin on the roof. After he created the speed area, other carpenters started asking him for one, and Swanson Instrument Company was born. Speed Square is actually a trading name, but like Kleenex, it is often used as a generic name for this class instrument. A similar tool Stanley called Fast Square and Irwin is simply called Rafter Square. How does it work? This video clearly runs through most of the key features of the speed area and how one would use it in day-to-day measurements of angle and cutting as well as in determining pitches. What can he do? Here's a little more detail about the different features of the square and how they apply. Marking - The most commonly used application of square speed is how to try a square. The tool has an adjoining fence along one right corner edge, allowing you to hold the square firmly against the board. From there, you can easily and accurately write a line along the other right edge to create a line that is completely perpendicular to the factory edge of the board. You can also use it in this mode to write 45 angles along the angular edge of the instrument (i.e. the base of the triangle). Measurement - Along one of the right-cornered edges of the square is the usual English ruler, who is either 7 or 12 (depending on the square speed model). This line is used to measure abbreviations. Below this lineup, in a triangular neckline, is what Scribe bar, series of cutouts at 1/4 intervals. To easily write rip or trim lines along the board, board, Just hold the pencil in the desired noting and run the fence along the edge of the board to make an accurate mark down its length. You can also use the correct angle of the square to check the inner corners for accuracy on the square. Saw Guide - One of the other common features of square speed as a guide to cross-cutting lumber at an accurate 90 or 45 angle. Firmly holding the fence to the edge of the board, you can use another right angle or 45 angle edge as a fence for your hand or circular saw. Protracting - To use the protractor function, you'll first find a Pivot point marked in the corner of the square at 90 degrees. With a pivot sign on the factory edge of your board, you rotate the bottom of the tool (where the protractor degrees are marked) and move it to the desired degree (say 45) on the same edge of the plant. The turning edge of your square is now at a 45 degree angle to the edge of the factory. Mark this angle and you're ready to cut. Measuring Pitches - Part of the role of square speed as a protractor, and its original mission as a tool, in quickly finding common (and unusual) slinging angles for pitches on rooftops. This is achieved by using the main protractor and two specialty protractor angle guides on the inside of the tool. The guide directly above the protractor is marked Common. On it, common roof resins are listed as height (in inches, more than 12 start-ups), for common rafters from 1 to 30. Above this guide is another, marked HIP-VAL. This means Hip Valley and refers to the rise of more than 12 run by a hip or valley-type rafters. The above video shows one example of how to use square speed to find rafter pitches. Explaining the whole process for this quickly becomes too confusing for this review. Stanley has a guide to their quickSquare online and I found a public copy of the Swanson Speed Square guide (see links below). Stanley's guide does a great job of explaining all the different types of roof, includes glossary terms, and shows you how to use the square to find the right step for different types of roofs. A classic work by a YouTuber who made the above speed square basics of the video, as well as a video showing how the frame rafters at the speed of the square. Other Cool Features - Swanson Speed Square has a patented feature - diamond cut, diamond-shaped cut on the edge of the tool line. It is used to square on the line written across the board, so you can make the perfect 90 lines from your scribe at an angle to the edge of the board. You can also use square speed as a do-do level when you find yourself without a proper bubble level. You need a plumb-bean, but you can improvise one with a string and a nut (or some other suitable weight). Here's a video showing this in Action. Action. Information I managed to find a copy of the infamous little Blue Speed Square PDF guide that ships with each Swanson Speed Square. I found it in the archives of the Oak Lawn Public Library, Oak Lawn, Illinois, being the home of the Swanson Instrument Company. A little more affordable for beginners is the Stanley Fast Square Instruction Guide (PDF). There's also a short how-to-at-the-family handyman, which shows you a simple method of finding a roof pitch with the level and speed of the area. I hope you've learned a little more about that strange triangular tool known as square speed. If you have any tips or tricks to work with square speed, or any questions or comments, please follow them below. Named Swanson Speed Square Guide Sphere - Content This Item is a guide for Swanson Speed Square. The area is a tool produced by Swanson Tool, which once had a presence in the Oak Lawn. 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