Footprint 1877 160200 Rosewood Mortice/Marking Gauge
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Footprint 1877 160200 Rosewood Mortice/Marking Gauge

List Price: $59.00
Discount Price: $41.03
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Brand: Footprint
Binding: Tools & Hardware

Features:

  • Mortise and marking gauge for marking wood prior to sawing, chiseling or cutting
  • Radiussed bottom edge slides easily on the material being marked
  • Rosewood stock; solid brass slide and thumb screw
  • Double and single pins; brass plates on the head face
  • 10.5 by 2.5 by 4 inches; weighs 12.8 ounces shipped

Accessories:
 

This Old House (1-year)

Measuring, Marking, and Layout: A Builder's Guide

Customer Reviews:

Essential tool.... [Posted on 2004-11-25]
Every wood worker needs at least one of these in their tool chest, I have several. Much more accurate than marking with a pencil, I use em for laying out mortise/tenon joints and dovetails.
This gauge is every bit as nice as my Lee Valley marking gauges, very nice fit and finish and operates smoothly. Fits the hand well and the points take and hold a nice edge ( I like a chisel point on my gauges, cuts the wood instead of tearing it). The brass inserts insure the face will last for years. The knobs and slide are also high quality brass and are easy to operate.
This is a quality tool and I recommend it highly.


Well done tool. [Posted on 2007-03-24]
I have been using this mortice/marking gauge for a while.
It does its job well and didn't build up any play over time.
Definitively a good buy


Well made, but one small modification [Posted on 2008-03-10]
There's no doubt that a marking gauge is essential, and makes for for more accurate joinery cutting. And this particular example seems really well made for the price. The biggest thing that bugs me, however, is that it uses pins rather than knives to do the marking. Being round, the pins tend to wander when traveling with the grain, making for less accurate lines. With cross-grain marking, then tend to tear the wood fibers rather than slice.
The mod I'd recommend would be to file the pins flatter near the ends, creating knife points rather than sharpened rods. This will help in cross-grain situations, slicing the grain and giving you a much sharper line. And if you angle the front of the "blade" away from the tool just slightly, it will pull the tool tightly against the workpiece when marking with the grain (instead of following the grain off your intended line).
This little modification should make this gauge a sharp performer. (I apologize for that horrible play on words.)


DON'T BOTHER [Posted on 2008-08-30]
While I agree, every woodworker can use one of these, this one ain't it. It is NOT all rosewood as the manufacturer would have you believe. Only the face is. The slider is some cheap hardwood poorly stained to resemble rosewood. Again, Crown products are far superior than Footprint's. And in this case, less $$$. Matter of fact, you can get these for about $25 at your local WoodCraft stores. And their brands are cheaper and better quality (all rosewood for one).


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