Friday, July 22, 2011

Sector Sticks or What; Me Measure??

At last Wednesdays meeting Rich Daugherty gave an informative and interesting talk on the use of sector sticks.  These are the latest in his quest to eliminate measurement from his work!  Sector sticks are a seventeenth century (perhaps even earlier) tool that allows you to evenly and quickly divide spaces and proportionately increase or decrease the size of an object.  If you think about this (and I did), these could be used without any formal system of measurement, all you need is a base size. Rich gave everyone who wanted it a copy of the article from Popular Woodworking, June 2011.

Calculating with Sector Stick
In a nutshell, here's the premise as to how they work.  They can be made any size needed and are hinged at one end.  You use them in conjunction with a pair of calipers. Measuring from the back of your hinge knuckle, you divide them into 13 equal parts. In the picture above he set the sticks at the end of the board on a number (lets say six) and demonstrated how you would find half of the length.  Since half of six is three you would set your caliper the distance between the numbers three on the sticks.  This is half of the total distance so you would simply set one leg of the caliper at the edge of the board, then lay out a point with the the other leg and there's your center.

A Studious Moment

Other tools that Rich brought in to share included these:

Set up Blocks (in pouch), Calipers, and Mortise Gauge


Mortise Chisel used to set Mortise Gauge


Trammel Point




One of Rich's many Woodworking books
The nice thing about woodworking is that you can individualize it and take it in any direction you would like.  If you went to the AWFS show this week you saw the amazing advances of computers and computer controlled equipment and how they've changed woodworking.  If you're more enthusiastic about programming but enjoy wood too Rockler, and several others, have what you could consider a tabletop CNC set up that's fairly affordable.  My own preference is to combine machinery with lots of hand work to produce my work.  Others are more interested in custom cabinetry and built-ins.  That's what so nice about the Sin City Woodworkers, we have a diverse group of people and by sharing with one and other we all learn something new.
Saying that -- who'd like to step up and share their woodworking preferences with the group next month?

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Almost Forgot to Remember :-{

Hope this doesn't come too late for all of you to join us Wednesday for the monthly meeting.  It's also the first official show day for the AWFS at the Convention Center. I hope to go in the afternoon to walk part of the floor and have two classes on Thursday so won't be much time then.  It would be nice if some of you that go on Wednesday would come to the meeting to share highlights and "must sees" with the rest of us.


Our next meeting is scheduled for July 20 at 7:00 PM, and will feature Richard Daugherty, who has been raving about sector sticks ever since reading Jim Tolpin's Sector Stick article that Popular Woodworking published a few issues back. 

Rich says it's the best article he's read in years, and is going to bring a sample and show us how two sticks and one hinge will eliminate math and layout errors in our work. Rich is also in the process of making a 'Joseph Moxon' twin screw vise, and might have something to share about his progress. Rich's affable teaching style makes him one of most popular speakers, and this meeting is sure to be an informative one.