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  2. Category:Woodworking measuring instruments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Woodworking...

    Category: Woodworking measuring instruments. ... This category is for measuring and marking instruments used in woodworking, cabinet making, joinery, and carpentry.

  3. Square (tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_(tool)

    Framing square, or steel square, or carpenter's square, or roofing square Originally designed for timber framing, a framing square is made from a single flat piece of metal or polymer to a standardised design with a long, wide blade and at 90° to that a shorter, narrower tongue. It can also be used for measuring lengths and for calculating angles.

  4. Compass (drawing tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compass_(drawing_tool)

    A beam compass is an instrument, with a wooden or brass beam and sliding sockets, cursors or trammels, for drawing and dividing circles larger than those made by a regular pair of compasses. [2] Scribe-compasses [3] is an instrument used by carpenters and other tradesmen. Some compasses can be used to draw circles, bisect angles and, in this ...

  5. Calipers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calipers

    In this instrument, a small, precise rack and pinion drives a pointer on a circular dial, allowing direct reading without the need to read a vernier scale. Typically, the pointer rotates once every inch, tenth of an inch, or 1 millimeter. This measurement must be added to the coarse whole inches or centimeters read from the slide.

  6. Combination square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Combination_square

    A combination square is a multi-purpose measuring and marking tool used in metalworking, woodworking, and stonemasonry. It is composed of a rule and one or more interchangeable heads that can be attached to the rule. [1] [2] Other names for the tool include adjustable square, combo square, and sliding square.

  7. Speed square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Speed_square

    Albert J. Swanson invented the "A" Speed Square in 1925 as a carpenter's layout tool. He later founded the Swanson Tool Company to mass produce his invention. [3] Today, the Swanson Tool Company still manufactures and distributes the Speed Square and other carpentry tools from its headquarters in Frankfort, Illinois.