Why bother?
Good question. A high-quality square is only a mouse-click away, so why build your own? For one thing, building is cheap. Really good squares from a company like Starrett are breathtakingly expensive. More affordable squares are often a bit out of square and once you get involved in a draw-filing and calibrating your brand new square, you might as well just build the damn thing.
Good question. A high-quality square is only a mouse-click away, so why build your own? For one thing, building is cheap. Really good squares from a company like Starrett are breathtakingly expensive. More affordable squares are often a bit out of square and once you get involved in a draw-filing and calibrating your brand new square, you might as well just build the damn thing.
Also, all-wood squares are a joy in the hand. They’re weightless. Seriously; you might forget you’re holding
one. This is hard to believe if you’re
used to clunky commercial squares, especially ones with cast metal stocks, but
these are heavy, clumsy tools covered in sharp corners and angles that will
ding your work. A wooden square will
give you no such trouble.
But wait, can something made of wood really be accurate
enough? Sure. I wouldn’t try to do machining with wooden
layout tools, but they’re great for woodwork.
Do they drift out of true over time?
Yeah, but only a tiny bit and they’re very easy to square up again. And if you’re still not sold, knocking
together a few squares is a fine little skill-builder, and if you use scraps
it’s pretty much free.
The wood.
This part matters, but it’s nothing to obsess over. Pick some straight-grained, dry hardwood;
something that’s been in your shop for a long time. The traditional wood is mahogany, but I’ve
got better things to do with such expensive timber. I recently made a large square from poplar
and a smaller one from walnut and maple.
The long part of your square (often called the “blade,” “rule,” or
“tongue”) is ideally made from quarter-sawn stock, but I wouldn’t obsess over
that, either.
The rule is generally about ¼ inch thick. Thinner is also fine, but anything thicker is
likely to be clumsy. I usually find
something a bit thicker than the width of my ¼” chisel and then plane it down
until the two match exactly. The stock
should be about three times as thick as the blade. For length, the ratio of blade to stock is
usually 3:2. So a 15 inch blade would be
paired with a 10 inch stock.
The joint.
Like everything else in woodworking, there are many ways to
skin this cat. To join the stock and the
blade, you might use a half-lap, a tiny mortise-and-tenon, or the joint Chris
Schwarz demonstrated on The Woodwright’s Shop: an elegant little mortise
combined with an open bridle joint. This
last one is surely the most secure option, but it’s also difficult to
execute. For my own work, I prefer a
simple bridle joint stabilized with pins.
For my larger square, I cut a small notch into the blade that could
register into the stock below the bridle joint.
This notch adds bearing surface and stability while also giving you a
surface that you can easily trim while tweaking the square for…squareness.
Cutting the joint is straightforward. Set a mortise gauge to the width of your
chisel, center it on your stock, and run your lines. Saw down close to the baseline with a back
saw and then chop out the waste with the chisel. Stay away from your baseline during the
chopping phase and then trim down to it carefully. Depending on how good your sawing is, you may
need to clean up the inside walls with a paring chisel. While making my last square, I did quite a
bit of chiseling. It still came out
nicely.
If you’d like an even more basic approach, you can take a
large piece of thin stock, cut it into four pieces, and then laminate them
together to mimic the hand-cut bridle joint.
If you don’t feel skilled enough to accurately cut such a small joint
and you prefer to go the laminated approach, don’t feel bad. This is a totally legitimate way to make a square.
However you make your square, I suggest pinning the joint
for stability. For my larger, poplar
square, I used bits of bamboo chopstick, which were free, perfectly round, and
extremely strong. For my smaller and
fancier square, I used some ¼” brass rod I had laying around. Brass and walnut go extraordinary well
together, but any old wooden dowel will get the job done.
Truing Up
If you already own a reasonably accurate square (even a
cheap speed-square), then I suggest gluing up your shop-made squares around
this reference surface. If you’ve already
got a good 90° angle sitting around, then there’s no reason to reinvent the
wheel. A nice shelf-corner or bit of
sheet-goods with factory edges will work just as well.
Once your square is out of the clamps, place the beam
against a known, true edge and strike a line along one side of the beam. Flip the square 180°, line it up with the
mark you just made, and strike another line.
These two lines should be exactly parallel to one another. If you’re very lucky, they will look like one
line. If not, then you’ll easily be able
to see which direction your beam is leaning.
You can generally correct the offending edge by planing or chiseling
away a tiny bit of material at one end and then blending the whole edge
together with a file or sandpaper on a block.
Make sure to repeat this process with both the edges of your beam.
Once you’ve finished, scrape or sand the whole thing and
apply a film finish. I used shellac, but
polyurethane and lacquer are also good choices.
A hard finish will keep for square looking clean and will limit seasonal
movement.
Will my square stay true forever?
Nope. But neither
will your commercial squares. I stopped
using my vintage try-squares when I tested them using the above method and
found that all five of them were off (and not by a little bit, either). All squares move over time. At least the ones you make yourself are quick
and easy to fix.
For more information on shop-made squares, check out my
Youtube video and the free Tip Sheet. I
also have plans for two shop-made squares available on my website.
Nice. I built a tri-square a while back, but the instructions were much more difficult. It does not have to be hard to be good. May throw together a few using this simpler approach with some scraps just to have around or share.
ReplyDeleteAnd I guess try square is the correct name (not tri-square)
DeleteActually, it's "try square", where try means check or test. In other words, it's used to check for squareness.
DeleteGood writeup. Like your to-the-point attiture and focus on function over form
ReplyDeleteThanks to everyone for their kind words! I really appreciate the opportunity to contribute to this great blog.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this post, Rex! What you did looks much simpler than what I did!
DeleteCD-ROM jewel case are accurately square and can be used as reference for the glue-up.
ReplyDeleteSylvain
I second that! I've used that method before. But does anyone have CDs anymore?
DeleteThe *most* accurate cheap squares you'll find are plastic drafting triangles. I buy the "Alvin" brand and get the orange translucent ones - price is $5-15 depending on size (paid $12 for a monster version). I don't know how they manufacture them but they are always dead-on. Good enough that I use a 12" one to test tablesaw sleds and don't worry about the "5-cut" method anymore. These are seriously your best reference squares short of spending $200 for machinist/engineering squares.
ReplyDelete