I have a bunch of Starrett Squares, a couple Scherr Tumico squares, Lufkin, Brown and Sharpe and Union Tool. Starrett has the best attention to detail, but all are very good. I like my Union the best.
I have a bunch of Starrett Squares, a couple Scherr Tumico squares, Lufkin, Brown and Sharpe and Union Tool. Starrett has the best attention to detail, but all are very good. I like my Union the best.
"A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".
– Samuel Butler
I can't recommend Epstein's site enough. I bought a 24" solid machinst square (about 10lbs), a 6" machinist sq, 12" adj sq, 6" combo, straight edge...all for $135 inc $16 shipping. The PEC stuff they sell is very nice.
I have 5 Starrett's, two 24" ones, all with centering heads and protractor, but my favorites are my old Lufkin ones made in Saginaw MI. Just have a soft spot for old Lufkin stuff.
Actually, it isn't bad at all. It served me well on my bench build, and it will remain in the stable as a second/backup option. But at almost 1/2 off, I had to order the Starrett.
Make your grandfather proud by just making a new locking bolt. I had a Stanley combo square locking bolt (not a 50 year old square like yours) break on me and I just got a 1/4" SS bolt, a hacksaw, and a file and made a new one. Better than new.
Wayne
I recently came across a vintage (probably from the '60's) Craftsman combo square at a garage sale for $1.50. Solid, accurate and the right price. I had been using a modern Empire, I know and cannot use one of the three Starrett combo's cause they are too valuable. Guess I'm an old cheapskate at heart
It's not hard to fix an out of square combination square
The 60's Craftsman is likely a Tumico product. If in good shape, you did very well.
This might be heresy, but Stumpy Nubs recently did a review of the iGauging set. For reference, he compared it to Starrett and, while it wasn't quite as good, it seemed pretty close. Thoughts?
They look like a nice set of tools. Definitely a little cheaper, price wise, than Starrett's. One thing you get with Starrett is NIST traceability, not sure with iGauging.What this means is that a Starrett can be used as a reference standard, as long as it's NIST traceability is maintained. This is a significant piece of the price a person pays for Starrett tools.
Starrett makes a quality tool, and have for over a hundred years. A person wouldn't go wrong buying Starrett, but there are other options for folks that don't quite need machinist's accuracies.
As long as any square can be adjusted square, and are taken care of, there is no reason to believe that they wouldn't be just fine.
"The first thing you need to know, will likely be the last thing you learn." (Unknown)