The Tool Tyrant
ALLIANCE MEMBER
Ya, so I AM an old (retired) framer but I still remember neat little tricks. While reading another thread requesting help with figuring out a hypotenuse, it made me think of the old 3-4-5 (hypotenuse being 5) trick.
Problem: You need to frame a wall square with another wall, you have no calculator and you're clueless
with trigonometry or you just want to show someone how 'cool' you are.
Solution: Mark a point (we'll call "A") anywhere along a given line (or wall), on the same line or wall measure and place another mark (we'll call "B") 3' from the first mark ("A") next, have someone (preferably a well endowed female) hold the 'dumb' end of your tape measure at point "B". Next hold a pencil (carpenter pencil prefered) at the 5' mark on your tape measure and draw an arc where you guess a line square with point "A" would cross. Next, once again have your 'helper' hold the dumb end of your tape at point "A", then holding your pencil at the 4' mark on your tape, draw an arc that crosses over your first arc. Where the two arc lines cross, (we'll call "C"). Now, snap a line from point "A" through point "C". Now you have two perfectly perpendicular lines. Collect your trophy and move along.
Same thing except different steps...if you wanted to check two existing walls to see if they're perpendicular, measure out from 3' on wall "A" from where the walls intersect, place a mark on the wall. Next, measure out 4' on wall "B" and place a mark, the diagonal distance between the two mark should be 5'...exactly.
Note: you can use multiples of 3-4-5 (6-8-10...9-12-15...12-16-20 etc) for greater accuracy on longer runs.
This could have all been easily illustrated with a few simple lines and numerals, but I'm old and clueless
Problem: You need to frame a wall square with another wall, you have no calculator and you're clueless
with trigonometry or you just want to show someone how 'cool' you are.
Solution: Mark a point (we'll call "A") anywhere along a given line (or wall), on the same line or wall measure and place another mark (we'll call "B") 3' from the first mark ("A") next, have someone (preferably a well endowed female) hold the 'dumb' end of your tape measure at point "B". Next hold a pencil (carpenter pencil prefered) at the 5' mark on your tape measure and draw an arc where you guess a line square with point "A" would cross. Next, once again have your 'helper' hold the dumb end of your tape at point "A", then holding your pencil at the 4' mark on your tape, draw an arc that crosses over your first arc. Where the two arc lines cross, (we'll call "C"). Now, snap a line from point "A" through point "C". Now you have two perfectly perpendicular lines. Collect your trophy and move along.

Same thing except different steps...if you wanted to check two existing walls to see if they're perpendicular, measure out from 3' on wall "A" from where the walls intersect, place a mark on the wall. Next, measure out 4' on wall "B" and place a mark, the diagonal distance between the two mark should be 5'...exactly.
Note: you can use multiples of 3-4-5 (6-8-10...9-12-15...12-16-20 etc) for greater accuracy on longer runs.
This could have all been easily illustrated with a few simple lines and numerals, but I'm old and clueless

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