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Your cart is empty.Irritated
Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2024
Love the three sided stability of using these.
Unanimouse
Reviewed in the United States on July 4, 2024
quality for daily use
Mike W
Reviewed in the United States on October 15, 2024
Well made Quality Scale that one can easily have a lifetime. Excellent finish and scale markings. If you like using nice tools, this one will not disappoint.
SS
Reviewed in India on August 31, 2023
Really nice scale! A must buy for all architects!
George J.
Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2023
Exactly what I expected. Good quality easy read.
Yolanda Rueda
Reviewed in Spain on October 8, 2023
Tal y como se muestra en las fotografías.Es perfecta para lo que necesito.Gracias al vendedor.
LN Bayne
Reviewed in Canada on October 1, 2023
This is a ruler that will last and not lose its accuracy because of repeated use, unlike plastic equivalents. I really like this ruler and it fits my needs.
bailleul alain
Reviewed in France on July 10, 2021
Satisfait de la règle
K. Tkacs
Reviewed in the United States on March 24, 2021
I’ve used plastic architect’s scales for decades, but I quite like this aluminum one. (And yes, it's a single tool... you don't get three metal scales for this price.) The weight is comparable to plastic ones, but it has a nicer feel. At first glance, it almost looks light-gray, but that’s because it has a very fine acid-etched-like texture that makes it easier to read in different lighting situations. There are plastic ‘ends’ that presumably protect the corners from damage.Some seem confused about the markings, so here’s a quick explanation. This is not an imperial/metric ruler – it’s all about [imperial] ratios commonly used in engineering and architectural drawing. Remember, this is not a ‘ruler’ or straight-edge – it’s not about making “rules” (lines). It’s a scale. It allows you to draw and read drawings at different commonly-used scales without constantly doing math. For instance, if you have a floor plan of a building, and the drawing is in 1:48, meaning that the drawing is 1/48th the true size of the thing it describes, then 1/4”=1’ (each quarter-inch on the drawing indicates one foot in reality). In other words, one inch on the drawing is four feet (48 inches) in full-size. This scale lets you quickly read distances without having to constantly multiply your measurements by 48 to get the “real world” distances. Once you understand that, the markings are not mysterious. Let’s look at a few of the scales as example.Hold the scale with the RED side facing you (logo and “Architect” upper-left, “Made in Taiwan” upper right).This is what most would consider a ‘normal ruler.’ This is the 1:1 scale (one inch = one inch). The “16” printed far left in this particular case means that every vertical marking on that edge is 1/16th of an inch. This edge is different from all the others because of the way it is named and because it shows only a single scale – ‘real world.’Still looking at the red side, flip it (logo lower-right). The “3/32” at left means that 3/32” on the drawing equals one foot in reality. This is 1:125 scale. You read this from left-to-right starting at the “0” (NOT starting from the left-most vertical lines which are handy finer divisions of the scale for smaller distances).Now at far-right, you see “3/16” … this is ~1:75 scale (3/16” on the drawing = one foot in reality). This is the tricky part. Any scales that have their names printed on the *right* side must be read from right-to-left, always starting at the zero (which again may not be the first marking at the extremes).If you understand the three scales on that one side, you understand the rest of the tool. It’s three sided, giving you six functional edges, and all but one edge displays two interlaced scales, one read from the left and one from the right. That’s eleven commonly-used imperial scales in a single tool. (The description here says “6 scales” but that’s a conservative count due to paired scales being related by simple 1:2 ratios… 1 & 1/2, 1/8 & 1/4, 3/16 & 3/32, etc.)I’ll pass along the advice of several professors of mine: “NEVER use your measuring tools as straight edges for drawing or cutting!” Used and treated properly, this scale should last a lifetime.Hope this helps!
Gennari G.
Reviewed in Italy on April 28, 2021
Molto valido anche questo righello con scale in pollici, quindi non usuale ma utile. Robusto e leggero al tempo stesso.
Shaun Muneno
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2020
I just wanted a ruler for a straight edge, and this is fashionable, straight, and sturdy. However, I am not an architect and so I honestly have no idea what most of the markings on this thing are for or what it measures. I do however recognize the 12 inches and what is most likely centimeter markings. Would have been nice to have some kind of instruction manual for this thing but alas it does have numbers on it. And a bunch of variety spaced lines and things. Also three colors, which add to variety. Would have been better in my opinion, if the third color were an actual color rather than just the silver coloring of the ruler itself. Also, has not increased ability for spatial awareness or architectural design prowess. Still very durable, with premium aesthetic quality. 5/5. Could have been better, but oh well.
Caleb Cox-Wohner
Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2019
My aluminum ruler has been with me near to a year now. It's still a wonderful tool when I need a straight edge, or when I'm drawing a blueprint or map for an area. It has seen the markings of time much sooner than desired though. It has it's dents and some of the numbers have lost part of themselves, or their measurement lines. Still, I would recommend getting it as an artist, it's a neat little design you need to get used too at first, but after that, you should be fine using it like a champ.
C Reynolds
Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2019
Solid ruler that's easy to work with. Used it for some architect drawings and it's effective. Easy to read. Only complaint would be that because it's aluminum it can get marks on it pretty easily with pencil or marker. Shouldn't be too difficult to clean off though.Bottom Line: Would recommend to anyone needing such a ruler. Would buy again.
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