
I know that is one thing i caught on quick too... lol.. i bet it was a auto spell checker... pretty cool idea though a tape measure where you can measure from one wall to the other with out bending the tape to read it.
- once i went to cut carpet in a room of the house we no longer own anymore. When it was cut, and laid in place i was 1/4 inch short on one wall. My friend said to rent a carpet kicker.. after 10 minutes my knee was hurting... (old injury) i ended up paying a craigslist guy to come and lay the rest of the rooms carpet. ...but this would have been nice to have for that job!![]()
pro-tip.
look at the bottom or side of a tape measure, they tell you how much to add for a measurement. stanley 12' tape is 2" added from the mark on the line. purdy simple trick to measure without bending a tap (even harbor freight tapes have it..... under the rubber skin, and its in mm.. lol)
Every tape I've ever owned has that.
We bought a black and decker (I think) tape measure with a laser level built in that projected laser lines.
The useless piece of **** didn't have a flat spot anywhere on the housing. I couldn't sit level at any angle. Actually had a v bottom to absolutely keep it from sitting level.
Just like the laser tape, this one appears to be designed by someone who has read of tapes but never even touched one.
Nothing new here.
I do really like the tape I bought the wife.
It has inches, mm, and a scale to divide by half.
Example: under the 36" mark is another mark reading 18".
She also has a
High visibility yellow tape with huge numbers on it.
It has the standard stud width scales also, and some 20" or something scale I can't figure out what to use it for.
It does not come in colors.
The sea sae thing:
I'm not sure that is even close to the right terminology.
I think imperial, but few know that term.
mm and inches.
I think that would cure.
I don't know (and it seems odd, but not odd enough for me to care much) that sae would be correct.
If it confuses me(which it does a bit) I have to assume it confuses anyone else as silly as I.
pro-tip.
look at the bottom or side of a tape measure, they tell you how much to add for a measurement. stanley 12' tape is 2" added from the mark on the line. purdy simple trick to measure without bending a tap (even harbor freight tapes have it..... under the rubber skin, and its in mm.. lol)

I have an el cheapo measure in my car, and it says 3/4" on the bottom when clearly the body but the body of it is more like 2.5 inches.![]()
The scale you are referring to, the small black diamonds, or triangles (diamonds are more commonly found), on the top scale of the tape measure starting at 19.2 inches are for truss layouts for 8-foot sheet goods. Saves one truss in every 8 feet. At 8' a new layout starts and lands again at 8'. You could do wall framing layout this way too in lieu of 24" OC. But you couldn't run vertical ply goods like T1-11.We bought a black and decker (I think) tape measure with a laser level built in that projected laser lines.
The useless piece of **** didn't have a flat spot anywhere on the housing. I couldn't sit level at any angle. Actually had a v bottom to absolutely keep it from sitting level.
Just like the laser tape, this one appears to be designed by someone who has read of tapes but never even touched one.
Nothing new here.
I do really like the tape I bought the wife.
It has inches, mm, and a scale to divide by half.
Example: under the 36" mark is another mark reading 18".
She also has a
High visibility yellow tape with huge numbers on it that is extremely a wide and stands out without collapsing to about 16'.
Every one of them is marked with the case length.
It has the standard stud width scales also, and some 20" or something scale I can't figure out what to use it for.
It does not come in colors.
The packaging only shows a patent application serial number. The application for this device has not been granted a patent. Therefore, you did not meet the patent holder.
I am often chastised for not being a member of 'the perpetual bandwagon of you can do it little buddy!' rah rah team.

Looking at the claims in this application, the Applicant didn't get much for his money with the person he retained. Good luck with this one…
BTW, the individual that counseled the Applicant to put the application serial number on the product really did the client a disservice. Applicant should have used "Patent Pending" to keep the world somewhat unsure of the features he desired to claim.
"...Don't start with the 'we are going to billionaires! ********…"
The patent system really does not favor the small inventor.
It's really geared for the big corporate interests. The small inventor is in a woefully poor position in most cases.
Like anything where litigation is possible. Like anything where big money is on the line. AIA, specifically IPR was supposed to improve quality and avoid litigation, but of course folks with "innovative business methods" are already using it to other ends.
Wait, wasn't this thread about a cool new tape measure?
I think the door was opened to talk about patents and even the patent process be it good or not so good. I'm a fan of copyrights and trademarks because they are quick and cheap to be had. In the case of the tape measure, with CR and TM in place, another could copy the design but not the name or any aspect of the packaging including labels, instructions and even colors in their proportions on the tool or display pack.thought i would share this tool i found today. The guy i got talked to was the designer and patent holder of this tape measure.
I've been using dual scale tapes for years. When you have to divide a length into equal parts, MM works much faster than fractions.
Like anything where litigation is possible. Like anything where big money is on the line. AIA, specifically IPR was supposed to improve quality and avoid litigation, but of course folks with "innovative business methods" are already using it to other ends.
Wait, wasn't this thread about a cool new tape measure?
After telling the guy that designed these about the website he told me today that he was band from the site after signing up. i didn't catch his user name but i think he sent a message to the moderator asking why.
pretty cool tool.

I find that 173" divides as easily as 173cm.
Oh yeah? How do you mark 34.6 in inches? (/5) Or 24.14285? (/7)
How do you mark 173 cm/7 = 24.14285?
173/7 = 2 and 23/32.
Since you need a calculator to figure it out just use a cheap construction calculator. It will give you answer in fractions.
I think you miss my point. When making several divisions as I had to do laying out the muntins in divided light windows, I wanted a system that was easy to use. Example: 173 cm / 5 would give me the spacing for 6 panes. Not considering the width of the muntin for the moment, we get the centerlines at 34.6 cm. At that point many calculators would simply add that value again and again giving the measurement of the next centerline with no fractions to be considered. Almost as easy as the marks on the tape for 16" OC.
Believe me, I did this 1000's of times and metrics were easier to work with and read on the scale. And it had to be dead nuts accurate if I wanted to set up a stop on the shaper to reverse cope all of the cross muntins to be equal and fit the net inside perimeter frame opening.
"...The ignorance in the patent office, among examiners, is another topic altogether…".
I wouldn't characterize it as ignorance, but…
In case you hadn't noticed, the pay at the USPTO is very penurious.
I remember when the reexamination statute was created. It was also supposed to stem patent litigation (heh.). Any competent litigator will generally advise you never to have a reexamination done though, even though it's understood that the outcome is not binding on the proceedings.
That said, I've always had good luck with reexaminations, and I've been on both sides. And they are enormously cheap when compared to litigation. And they always helped the client.