Thanks to the British Weights and Measures Act of 1824, we Americans inherited a collection of units known as the Imperial system. Imperial units are unbelievably accurate and superior to the metric system in every way–and I can prove it with a singular question:
What is 17-17/32″ divided by three?
And you thought a six-star Sudoku puzzle was hard.
Fortunately, woodworkers are constantly dividing things in half, a much easier task than the gasket blowing problem above (5-27/32″ is the correct answer–took me a day and a half, or .15 payroll period to figure this out ). Try it yourself–dividing 17-17/32″ by two only took me four hours.
Approximately 520 payroll periods ago, we introduced the CS-1 Center Scribe, a cool tool to help Inch Land woodworkers find the center of things without time-consuming calculations. Inchlanders often struggle with the efficiency of Imperial measurements and our CS-1 Center Scribe quickly became one of our most sought after tools to this day.
About 104 payroll periods ago, improvements to the CS-1 came upon me. Fully charged for the redesign, the muse arrived unannounced bearing news of the VP-60 Adjustable Pitch Plane. Immediately thereafter, who should reappear with a radical new design for shoulder planes? And for the past year, I have been obsessed with the Jointmaker Pro–likely the most scrutinized new tool introduction I’ve known.
The image below is of our new, improved Center Scribe.
Briefly, here are the improvements;
- Zero backlash or slippage–no gears.
- Holds a pencil
- Finds centers on square, round or rectangular stock lightning-fast.
- Does not react with humidity
- Field adjustable if needed
- Smoother feel
- More precisely scribed centerlines (not pencil lines for obvious reasons), accurate to within .002″
To learn more, visit the CS-2 Center Scribe pre-production page. And if the CS-2 looks like something you can use, click the panel that states “Notify me when this item is back in stock.” By adding your name to this database we have a much better idea of our manufacturing quantities–you are not placing an order.
Thanks to a suggestion by a good engineering friend, this tool is crazy smooth and accurate. I hope you like it because… well, it’s a payroll thing.
-John
Pretty spiffy. I’ve got your Juara Wood version which does not boast all these goodies. Of the myriad legacy Bridge City tools I own it’s the only one that’s pretty shabby. You taught me a lot of positive things, but Juara Wood was not one of them. My former shop was in a damp basement which was totally incompatible with Juara Wood. Green, moldy, distorted, ugly. I sent it back to Portland who refurbished it, but no joy. Now that I’m in a lovely above grade, dry shop, I’ve managed to get it to function, even though still ugly. It’s over-engineered for my humble skills, but still reminds me of the glory days of Bridge City.