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Started By
Message
The "Floating Hook" on end of a tape measure
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:47 am
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:47 am
That little "wiggle" isn't a manufacturing defect—it's a precision feature called a floating hook. It moves to ensure you get a "true zero" reading whether you are measuring from the inside or the outside of an object.
The distance the hook slides is exactly equal to the thickness of the metal hook itself (usually 1/16 of an inch or 1mm).
How It Works:
Outside Measurements: When you hook the tape over the edge of a board, the hook pulls out. This adds the thickness of the hook to the measurement, starting the "0" mark at the very edge of the board.
Inside Measurements: When you butt the tape against a wall or inside a drawer, the hook pushes in. This "hides" the thickness of the hook so the measurement starts exactly from the surface you're pushing against.
I thought those that weren't aware would benefit from this riveting knowledge. Thanks.
The distance the hook slides is exactly equal to the thickness of the metal hook itself (usually 1/16 of an inch or 1mm).
How It Works:
Outside Measurements: When you hook the tape over the edge of a board, the hook pulls out. This adds the thickness of the hook to the measurement, starting the "0" mark at the very edge of the board.
Inside Measurements: When you butt the tape against a wall or inside a drawer, the hook pushes in. This "hides" the thickness of the hook so the measurement starts exactly from the surface you're pushing against.
I thought those that weren't aware would benefit from this riveting knowledge. Thanks.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:49 am to The Mick
Measure once, cut twice.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:49 am to The Mick
I dont even care about precision.
I eyeball it.
Haven’t regretted it. Ever.
I eyeball it.
Haven’t regretted it. Ever.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:51 am to The Mick
Every tape measure should have the length of the tape measure body itself printed on the back of it. That's so when you measure against a wall or other obstacle you don't have to do the bendy tape deal, you can just look at the measurement on the back and add it to your measurement.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:52 am to The Mick
good news. i get to add 1/8" to my 3.5".
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:55 am to The Mick
“AI is going to take my job? I’d love to see AI drive an hour to cut a $300 beam 1/2” too short”
Posted on 2/26/26 at 10:55 am to dstone12
quote:
I dont even care about precision.
I eyeball it.
Haven’t regretted it. Ever.
I've watched some of the messcan house framers work around here, they don't use tapes or squares and some of their framing is like art work
ETA: roof decking too
This post was edited on 2/26/26 at 10:58 am
Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:13 am to The Mick
My philosophy is, ehh, close enough.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:16 am to The Mick
quote:
riveting knowledge.
ISWYDT
Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:21 am to dstone12
quote:"Caulk and paint makes a carpenter what he ain't."
I don't even care about precision.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:27 am to AUFANATL
my first carpentry truism I learned was when my dad and Mr Lons Bush were building our house. I was about 6.
Mr Bush told me "Once you cut a board too short, it doesn't matter how many more times you cut it - it will still be too short. Always be careful with the first cut."
Mr Bush told me "Once you cut a board too short, it doesn't matter how many more times you cut it - it will still be too short. Always be careful with the first cut."
Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:29 am to 777Tiger
quote:
some of their framing is like art work
Escher?

Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:45 am to The Mick
It also causes you to have to put every tape measure in an instrumentation shop on a freaking calibration rotation. $250 a year to tell me the tape measure still measures 12" as 12".
Posted on 2/26/26 at 11:51 am to 777Tiger
quote:
I've watched some of the messcan house framers work around here, they don't use tapes or squares and some of their framing is like art work ETA: roof decking too
Posted on 2/26/26 at 12:07 pm to Chad504boy
quote:
good news. i get to add 1/8" to my 3.5".
Your boyfriend will be pleased.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 12:13 pm to The Mick
So if you've been adding 1/16th to your penis length to compensate for the floating hook. Stop.
Posted on 2/26/26 at 12:16 pm to ChineseBandit58
quote:
my first carpentry truism I learned was when my dad and Mr Lons Bush were building our house. I was about 6.
Mr Bush told me "Once you cut a board too short, it doesn't matter how many more times you cut it - it will still be too short. Always be careful with the first cut."
I was about 12, went to the hardware store with Dad to get some material. Dad was in the screw aisle when someone walked up to help, "what are you looking for?" Dad, "I'm looking for wood screws". Guy, "how long you need 'em". Dad, "Pretty long time."
Posted on 2/26/26 at 12:18 pm to The Mick
And as these are easily bent ....
...you should check them by marking a hooked inch on a board and measure this using another part of the same ruler to check. Same with using it in a pushed to the wall fashion but use a metal non-rolling ruler. The fix is to slightly tap the hook-end to correctness in the appropriate direction.
It's also good to check your ruler in this fashion to your co-workers.
These little differences add up.
...you should check them by marking a hooked inch on a board and measure this using another part of the same ruler to check. Same with using it in a pushed to the wall fashion but use a metal non-rolling ruler. The fix is to slightly tap the hook-end to correctness in the appropriate direction.
It's also good to check your ruler in this fashion to your co-workers.
These little differences add up.
This post was edited on 2/26/26 at 12:22 pm
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