Sure the centre finder makes you draw off-centre. So just flip it, draw again, and it'll make to extremely close parallel lines. Same for your intersecting lines. And you end up with a tiny parallelogram enclosing the true centre.
After watching all these videos today, I just got a sudden urge to go to the garage and play with circles. 😎 All your videos (not just today's) are high quality content, but today you also passed the quantity test.
Update... Thanks to your idea, I found an old 24" framing square that was hanging around my tool shed being ignored, drilled two holes in the short leg, and with some hardware, I attached my Swanson Big "12" speed square to it. Presto-Chango, and 30 minutes later I have a centre finder that can handle up to a 30 inch diameter log. And with the wing nuts I can adjust the gap at the inside corner to accommodate different sized marking instruments. Thank you for making my day and for being the catalyst for helping me solve a tool problem without spending any money.
Nice trick! I use those Silver Streaks all the time at work to mark defects. Back when I was a welder, an older guy blew my mind when he showed me that the cap came off and had a sharpener inside. Made layout more precise. Most people I show that to- to this day didn’t know about the “hidden” sharpener.
I like learning new ways to layout parts. These 3 videos were very informative. For more precise parts I will use layout fluid or a Sharpie and a scribe
Great vid! Thanks for showing this. I'm gonna try this method with one slight modification to fix up the true centre issue: I'm going to put a piece of masking tape where the centre approximately is, then with the true centre, I'm going to run a scalpel to ever so slightly score the tape area right up against the true centre. And do that 3 to 4 times to triangulate the exact centre.
Good method, simple and quite straightforward. You could also use it for a flat plane circle by using the points of a divider placed on the circle and butting the square against the points.
You don''t have to be spot-on; you're looking for the centre of a very small error. Great use for a speed square. Wish I'd been shown as an apprentice steel fabricator how damn handy those things are for marking around steel sections.
Outstanding ! You are a great source of info ! B.T.W. I have a leatherman Sidekick in near Virginal condition , that I will gladly gift to you . I gets little carry time , which is a Sin! Largely due to your input , my main Multitool battery is the Surge + Bit adaptor and Whia bits , for work , and Spirit X with a Leatherman adaptor which fits the Whia bits . Can’t beat the Spirit for elegance and compactness ! Again if you are interested the Sideclip is yours !
Oh wow, I’m definitely interested in the SideClip. It is one of the few I don’t own. Email me at txtoolcrib@gmail.com and I will forward you my mailing address. Thanks a ton!
I never thanked you for the SideClip. Let me take the time to do that now. It’s one of my favorites, and a wonderful addition to the collection, thank you.
@@txtoolcrib You still have me agonizing about ordering one of the Black Aussie Spirits , as a New Zealander , I hate to put Bucks in Australian pockets ( kinda like a Canada vs. US thing ! Off topic I think the plier less, minimalist Multitools are an Evelutionary dead end , Victorinox already covered that base ! Cheers and best regards !
like it...another easy way is set the right angled piece as outside the circle to form two tangents. Then draw two right angle lines from the tangent contact towards the center of the circle. Where they cross is the center..
This is great. I want to point out something you did naturally that worked in your favor. You held the two parts together and didn't reverse or flip them. If you would have clamped them and done that simple rotation around the circumference with the assembly, the square could have been off by a little bit (say 89.5 deg), or the speed square (say 44.7 deg). When you make three or more tick marks in the center, the tiny circle will be exactly the center of a perfect larger circle. Similarly, i guess you could have used the Starrett and had a set of lines forming a tiny circle around the true center, a pencil width away, but the fat line is even fatter here. All bets are off if the outer circle is not circular, but it should still be close to the average center.
All you really have to do with the commercial centre finder is repeat it several times and the lines will intersect to create a small 'circle' the centre of which is dead centre. You tip is very relevant though... so long as you actually hold everything exactly the same!
Now I know why my centers are always slightly off when I use the center finder of a combo square. Thank you. Would I have the same problem if I used a very fine point scratch marker?
Man, I gotta tell ya, when I watched that first video for finding the center I spent the next 15-30 minutes thinking of ways how to pull this off at work (especially when my boss sees it, cause he's mr. Know-it-all). Now with the new video I want to show off even more 😆😆😆
I will stick to the center square. You do not have to hold two different squares in perfect alignment to get your perfect center point and if you are using the silver marker you are not worried about being to accurate. Because it is not far from using those kinder garten colors that are 1/2 inch in diameter for easy handeling by little hands. And sliding the center square around the perimeter and making several marks your perfect center will be the center of the multiple of marks. That will be very close if your circle is uniform. I just never had much luck holding 2 tools uniformaly with one hand.
You could probably just use a regular ruler. Place the 0 on one edge of thd circle and then pivot on the 0 until you find the largest length to the other side. That's your diameter. Rotate the circle and do it again. The intersection is your center.
You just need one speed square. Use the longer side of the square as chord. Then it is very easy to make a perpendicular bisector. Do the same thing from another point and two perpendicular bisectors will meet at the centre of the circle.
It seems everybody has a different method of finding the centre of a circle, the easiest way is to measure across the circle and find the largest measurement, mark both sides and draw a line across, then bisect the line, there is your centrepoint.
yeah I mean this is fine but the deviation in the 30 thou-ish centre finder is absolutely negligible if you cannot guarantee the 'circle' you have is perfectly circular... I've also never known anything to be marked like this for a centre to be critical down to much less than about 0.040 anyway. If you want a centre to be accurate scribing lines just use a scribe... which will press right up against the straight edge of the centre finder giving
Nice trick! I do think if I'm that concerned about the accuracy of the mark, I would use something like a scribe or marking knife rather than a pencil.
Or, you can simply draw your line with a scribe to achieve a most accurate line closest to the blade of the center finder head, then flip the tool so that the blade is opposite your line, scribe another line, you will notice about 1/16" gap between your two scribe lines. The center of that gap is your true center. :)
Your way and his way are both good and will get it close, however what you're saying wouldn't work with somthing needing accuracy. You would never be able to get the exact center of that gap of 1/16th inch. You might get it super close but you'll never have a true center that way. Just saying
A far easier way is to draw a circle on a piece of paper with your piece of what ever you are using and fold the paper twice and put the paper on the object and there is your center, no need to thank me , it was a pleasure to help out 😂😂😂
@@elconquistador98fold the paper circle in half, then fold the half circle in half to make a quarter circle. The center of the circle is where the two folds intersect.
13 No one has ascended to heaven but He who came down from heaven, that is, the Son of Man who is in heaven. 14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up, 15 that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. 16 For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. 17 For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.18 “He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God (YHVH, El Shaddai, Adonai, God of Jacob, Isaac, and Abraham). John 3:13-18
Sure the centre finder makes you draw off-centre. So just flip it, draw again, and it'll make to extremely close parallel lines. Same for your intersecting lines. And you end up with a tiny parallelogram enclosing the true centre.
@charlesdusautoy6637, Great point. I referenced your comment in something I commented.
Nothing to build or "buy" for the purpose of finding the center of a circle. I just went out to the garage and tried it myself. How Great!
After watching all these videos today, I just got a sudden urge to go to the garage and play with circles. 😎 All your videos (not just today's) are high quality content, but today you also passed the quantity test.
Absolutely brilliant. You just saved me a good chunk of change by using tools I already have. Thank you.
Update... Thanks to your idea, I found an old 24" framing square that was hanging around my tool shed being ignored, drilled two holes in the short leg, and with some hardware, I attached my Swanson Big "12" speed square to it. Presto-Chango, and 30 minutes later I have a centre finder that can handle up to a 30 inch diameter log. And with the wing nuts I can adjust the gap at the inside corner to accommodate different sized marking instruments. Thank you for making my day and for being the catalyst for helping me solve a tool problem without spending any money.
Glad to hear it. Thanks for the update.
Easy peasy, much better way than other methods, thanks.
Nice trick! I use those Silver Streaks all the time at work to mark defects. Back when I was a welder, an older guy blew my mind when he showed me that the cap came off and had a sharpener inside. Made layout more precise. Most people I show that to- to this day didn’t know about the “hidden” sharpener.
I hate to admit this, but it took me almost a year after I bought my first one to realize the same thing.
@@txtoolcrib I think I was on a year or two myself! Haha
Bravo! An ingenious idea, without having to buy or build a tool to find the centre!
I like learning new ways to layout parts. These 3 videos were very informative. For more precise parts I will use layout fluid or a Sharpie and a scribe
Great vid! Thanks for showing this. I'm gonna try this method with one slight modification to fix up the true centre issue:
I'm going to put a piece of masking tape where the centre approximately is, then with the true centre, I'm going to run a scalpel to ever so slightly score the tape area right up against the true centre. And do that 3 to 4 times to triangulate the exact centre.
Good method, simple and quite straightforward.
You could also use it for a flat plane circle by using the points of a divider placed on the circle and butting the square against the points.
thanks!! you have saved me so much time!!!
Glad I could help!
That angle rule is designed to be used with a scribe, which has a very fine point on it.
You don''t have to be spot-on; you're looking for the centre of a very small error. Great use for a speed square. Wish I'd been shown as an apprentice steel fabricator how damn handy those things are for marking around steel sections.
Outstanding ! You are a great source of info ! B.T.W. I have a leatherman Sidekick in near Virginal condition , that I will gladly gift to you . I gets little carry time , which is a Sin! Largely due to your input , my main Multitool battery is the Surge + Bit adaptor and Whia bits , for work , and Spirit X with a Leatherman adaptor which fits the Whia bits . Can’t beat the Spirit for elegance and compactness ! Again if you are interested the Sideclip is yours !
Oh wow, I’m definitely interested in the SideClip. It is one of the few I don’t own. Email me at txtoolcrib@gmail.com and I will forward you my mailing address. Thanks a ton!
I never thanked you for the SideClip. Let me take the time to do that now. It’s one of my favorites, and a wonderful addition to the collection, thank you.
@@txtoolcrib I figured it was a minor oversight , not a sentiment . Glad it found a good home !
@@txtoolcrib You still have me agonizing about ordering one of the Black Aussie Spirits , as a New Zealander , I hate to put Bucks in Australian pockets ( kinda like a Canada vs. US thing ! Off topic I think the plier less, minimalist Multitools are an Evelutionary dead end , Victorinox already covered that base ! Cheers and best regards !
like it...another easy way is set the right angled piece as outside the circle to form two tangents. Then draw two right angle lines from the tangent contact towards the center of the circle. Where they cross is the center..
That's a pretty neat trick. Thanks for sharing this
This is great. I want to point out something you did naturally that worked in your favor. You held the two parts together and didn't reverse or flip them. If you would have clamped them and done that simple rotation around the circumference with the assembly, the square could have been off by a little bit (say 89.5 deg), or the speed square (say 44.7 deg). When you make three or more tick marks in the center, the tiny circle will be exactly the center of a perfect larger circle.
Similarly, i guess you could have used the Starrett and had a set of lines forming a tiny circle around the true center, a pencil width away, but the fat line is even fatter here.
All bets are off if the outer circle is not circular, but it should still be close to the average center.
All you really have to do with the commercial centre finder is repeat it several times and the lines will intersect to create a small 'circle' the centre of which is dead centre.
You tip is very relevant though... so long as you actually hold everything exactly the same!
Thank you very much for sharing that was extremely useful
Use a scribe, and Starrett is a precision tool, made to layout true circles, rotate the centering head multiple times and get the exact center!
That is a great tip. Thanks for sharing!!
Now I know why my centers are always slightly off when I use the center finder of a combo square. Thank you. Would I have the same problem if I used a very fine point scratch marker?
No, using a scribe will eliminate that problem.
Looked like the edge your pencil was on moved enough right at the very end is what happened. Very slight movement. Thanks for explaining your method.
Man, I gotta tell ya, when I watched that first video for finding the center I spent the next 15-30 minutes thinking of ways how to pull this off at work (especially when my boss sees it, cause he's mr. Know-it-all). Now with the new video I want to show off even more 😆😆😆
Lol. That’s great! Hope you get the chance to use it.
Great and simple idea
Fantastic video! Thank you so much for this!
You’re very welcome.
Awesome, so simple.
This works fine if both your framing square and your speed square are accurate. You can also adjust your normal center finder with tape.
very simple, very helpful
Nice !! That's it. Just nice and easy ....
I will stick to the center square. You do not have to hold two different squares in perfect alignment to get your perfect center point and if you are using the silver marker you are not worried about being to accurate. Because it is not far from using those kinder garten colors that are 1/2 inch in diameter for easy handeling by little hands. And sliding the center square around the perimeter and making several marks your perfect center will be the center of the multiple of marks. That will be very close if your circle is uniform. I just never had much luck holding 2 tools uniformaly with one hand.
You could probably just use a regular ruler.
Place the 0 on one edge of thd circle and then pivot on the 0 until you find the largest length to the other side. That's your diameter.
Rotate the circle and do it again. The intersection is your center.
Thanks Very good.
Your center finder tool for the combination square is accurate if used with a scribe
You just need one speed square. Use the longer side of the square as chord. Then it is very easy to make a perpendicular bisector. Do the same thing from another point and two perpendicular bisectors will meet at the centre of the circle.
Could you make a video of all the gear and clothing you wear to work? Specially for winter months
That’s a good idea. I will try to get something together.
@@txtoolcrib 💯💯💯
@@txtoolcrib thanks for watching
I like that. Thanks
Do one for bolt hole pattern layout the old school way
Great video !
Excellent tip!
Good idea(s)!
Simple - thanks
Why would anyone be bothered about the thickness of the pencil nice video
The perpendicular bisecters
of either a cord or tangent of the circle will intersect at the
Center of that circle.
Chord
Great content Mr TX 👏🏽🇿🇦
Thank you.
What country Is that? Im from México
@@danielorozco1728 Texas, United States.
@@txtoolcrib sorry mate, I was talking to the guy up there who commented with an african flag
Ahhhh, no wonder I was confused. Thought I missed something.
You can get the leatherman bond off of the rei website
THANK YOU
Thanks.
It seems everybody has a different method of finding the centre of a circle, the easiest way is to measure across the circle and find the largest measurement, mark both sides and draw a line across, then bisect the line, there is your centrepoint.
so helpful
yeah I mean this is fine but the deviation in the 30 thou-ish centre finder is absolutely negligible if you cannot guarantee the 'circle' you have is perfectly circular... I've also never known anything to be marked like this for a centre to be critical down to much less than about 0.040 anyway. If you want a centre to be accurate scribing lines just use a scribe... which will press right up against the straight edge of the centre finder giving
That’s why you use a razzer blade to scribe metal.
You sound remarkably like Dustin Hoffman.
Awesome
Why didnt I know about this 35 years ago?
Nice trick! I do think if I'm that concerned about the accuracy of the mark, I would use something like a scribe or marking knife rather than a pencil.
Or, you can simply draw your line with a scribe to achieve a most accurate line closest to the blade of the center finder head, then flip the tool so that the blade is opposite your line, scribe another line, you will notice about 1/16" gap between your two scribe lines. The center of that gap is your true center. :)
Your way and his way are both good and will get it close, however what you're saying wouldn't work with somthing needing accuracy. You would never be able to get the exact center of that gap of 1/16th inch. You might get it super close but you'll never have a true center that way. Just saying
My way will get you within 1/32". If that's not close enough, you must be working for NASA!! @@johnzadinya2181
But... but... is it legal?
As far as I know!
Thre is easy way for find center
👌👌👌👌👌
A touch off = the thickness of the marker 😂😂😂
the better way i think - i'm french steel carpenter-
A far easier way is to draw a circle on a piece of paper with your piece of what ever you are using and fold the paper twice and put the paper on the object and there is your center, no need to thank me , it was a pleasure to help out 😂😂😂
Huh?
@@elconquistador98fold the paper circle in half, then fold the half circle in half to make a quarter circle. The center of the circle is where the two folds intersect.
@@ohsoloco5113 I understand now, but it is the long way around for sure
Talk about longing it out ffs
So you need a compass to draw the circle with, a piece of paper and then the “procedure”. You’re right, no need to thank you.
13 No one has ascended to heaven but He who came down from heaven, that is, the Son of Man who is in heaven. 14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up, 15 that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. 16 For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. 17 For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved.18 “He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God (YHVH, El Shaddai, Adonai, God of Jacob, Isaac, and Abraham). John 3:13-18
Thank you
Use the center finder, but account for the error when you make your center mark
Use a scribe
Why not just divide it by 2
This method eliminates any measuring.
See Tomahawk DIY for the correct method.
Which method would that be?
@@txtoolcrib Watch the video. I guess all y’all just want to do things the hard way. I’m out.
Witchcraft!
An overly complicated method and you are still a 32nd off center.
thats not perfect . . . .
⁉️🔴⛔
You took 3 minutes what should have been said in 10 seconds...
Zzzzzzzzzzzz
This comment has no value to the reader.
Why not just draw a line across the widest part of the circle, then 180 degrees and do it again, thats it..
Well give it a try both ways, then get back with me and tell me which one was better and faster.
Negative.....learn how to properly use a marking instrument, namely, the one you plan to use to mark the center.....
Really cool
still took too long