I did write to Beal suggesting they might like to add talking to their device 
for the use of the blind and in situations where maybe sighted people cannot be 
in direct line of sight with the device while setting equipment.

I think I will find contact information for these guys and write to them as 
well.

I didn't get a reply from Beale for what ever that is worth.

Dale Leavens, Cochrane Ontario Canada
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Skype DaleLeavens
Come and meet Aurora, Nakita and Nanook at our polar bear habitat.


  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Boyce, Ray 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, September 22, 2007 6:30 PM
  Subject: [BlindHandyMan] New Tool Review


  Wixey Website -
  http://www.wixey.com

  Digital Angle Gauge
  Wixey Digital Angle Gauge
  Review

  The Wixey Digital Angle Gauge has been a welcome addition to the woodworkers 
tool kit for machine setup and accuracy. These new angle measuring tools are
  simple to use, and best of all, very cost effective.
  Let's take a closer look...

  The Wixey Digital Angle Gauge
  This small tool measures just 2" x 2" x 1.3" deep and is constructed with a 
combination of hardened plastic (front and back faces) and aluminum casing

  It runs off a small 3.0v CR2032 button-type watch battery and the battery 
life is promised as being up to 6 months. This is quite reasonable given the 
size
  of the battery. In fact, the digital angle gauge is always turned ON, i.e. it 
is always measuring electronically. It is just the digital display that can
  be turned off to further extend battery life. The tool features an Auto Shut 
Off function in case you forget to turn it off. A handy feature for the 
forgetful
  among us.

  The LCD display is clear and easy to read. The gauge has a resolution of 0.1 
of a degree, so it will provide sufficient accuracy for just about all 
woodworking
  tasks. Certainly more accuracy than you can get by eye, or that provided by 
most measuring angle tapes or angle scales on power tools, which can be 
notoriously
  inaccurate at times, or only marked at 1 degree increments, meaning you have 
to guess if you want anything finer. Why would you want anything finer? Well,
  if you get into trim work or cutting for multiple-sided forms, then less than 
1 degree accuracy can mean the difference between roughly acceptable and
  perfection. I know which I would choose if both options are readily 
available! Accuracy is specified at +/- 0.1 degrees as well.

  On the bottom of the unit are three small round magnets. These allow the 
gauge to attach securely to any magnetic surface, which means most tool table 
tops
  (unless they are aluminum), all steel body cutting blades, and most tool 
fences. If you have all cast iron tool surfaces, you will have no issues at all
  attaching the tool securely. But what if you have a basic table saw with an 
aluminum table surface, like a job-site saw for example? Well, you can just
  sit the gauge directly on top of the table, magnetic or not. You do need to 
provide a reference surface to measure off for accurate angle readouts, so
  the tool is generally set flat on the table first, zeroed, then set of the 
saw blade body, and you will have no trouble attaching to the blade (since most
  are steel bodied), no matter what type of table surface you have.

  Below the LCD display are two buttons, and this alone signifies the 
simplicity of this tool, and equally, how easily it is to use. The ON/OFF 
button turns
  the display on or off... simple. The ZERO button zeroes the tool to the 
surface it is currently rested on, or magnetically attached to. As mentioned 
above,
  the general procedure for accurate angle measurement is to zero the tool on 
the static reference surface, i.e. the surface that will not move (generally
  the tool table) then place the Wixey gauge on the blade or secondary surface 
that does move to set your angle, or correct a badly set angle! So how does
  it actually work?

  Well the best description of the science behind it is given by the 
manufacturer...

  How does it read?

  "All of our readouts use what's called capacitive measuring technology. This 
is the exact same system that is used in almost all digital calipers that have
  been on the market for at least 20 years. There is a circuit board on a 
rotating counterweight that has a repeating pattern etched on it. There is a 
second
  fixed circuit board with a similar pattern and the rest of the electronics. 
As the 2 patterns pass over each other there is an electronic signal generated
  that is converted to rotation angle. The only moving part is the circuit 
board with counterweight passing over the fixed circuit board. There is no 
electrical
  connection between the 2 circuits boards and they do not even touch each 
other. There are no other mechanical moving parts."

  The good thing is that you don't even have to worry about all the scientific 
and electronics jargon to make use of the tool! The gauge also has a huge 
working
  range of 150 degrees, but rarely will you require more than 90 degree range 
in the woodshop.

  In Use
  The Wixey Digital Angle Gauge is a great tool for workshop machine and tool 
setup. It can be used to set table saw blades square to the table, or to set
  virtually any angle to make perfect bevel angle cuts. On the miter saw, you 
can again set the blade square to the table for accurate and square crosscuts,
  or set the blade at any angle, again, for bevel cuts. You can attach a larger 
drill bit in the drill press, secure the angle gauge to the bit and check
  how square the drill press table is to the drill bit/spindle, or set the 
table for angled drilling. You can do the same on the bandsaw, setting table 
square
  to the blade, or setting table at an angle to the blade with 0.1 degree 
accuracy. Your jointer fence can be set perfectly square for perfection in 
edge/face
  angles or squaring up bowed edges or faces. These are just a few of the 
possibilities. I am sure you could think of more, or situations in the past 
where
  this tool would have come in handy. You can use it for accurately measuring 
just about any angle with reference to another fixed angle. Handy for builders
  too no doubt, although it might be harder to secure to non-magnetic surfaces 
without some other attachment method.

  If you still are having trouble visualizing the use of the angle gauge, take 
a look at these basic use images from the manufacturer, or view our video in
  the right hand column:

  Table with 2 columns and 5 rows

  Step 1. Calibrate

  Set the gauge flat on the tool reference surface and press the ZERO to set 
the gauge to 0.0 degrees.

  Step 2. Attach

  Attach the gauge to the perpendicular blade and leave at 90.0 degrees or 
re-set to 0.0 degrees if desired.

  Step 3. Read

  Bevel the saw blade and read the precise bevel angle.

  table end

  To put things in perspective, let me describe the exact use of the gauge for 
setting a table saw blade, say, at 30 degrees. First the Wixey gauge is placed
  on the table surface, close to the blade and set to Zero. Next, place the 
gauge on the saw blade with the blade set at its square setting (usually 
referred
  to as 0 degrees). You will note that when you do this that the display will 
now show 90.0 degrees. If it does not, your blade is not exactly parallel to
  the saw table! It is important to ensure it does read 90.0 degrees because if 
you now start winding/tilting the blade, the measurements will read as degrees
  subtracted from 90. I.e. as you tilt the blade you will see it counting down, 
90, 85, 80 etc (all in small 0.1 degree steps of course). So to set a 30
  degree bevel, the gauge will actually read 60 degrees. It can be confusing. 
But the best option is to reset the gauge to zero when it is attached to the
  saw blade, after you have check the blade is actually 90 degrees to the 
table. With the gauge reset to zero when attached to the saw blade body, now 
when
  you tilt the blade, the gauge reads up from 0.0 degrees to whatever setting 
you require. Much simpler, and the gauge remains on the "upper" side of the
  tilting blade, i.e. with no chance of the blade getting stuck between the 
underside of the blade body and the table surface as it is tilted.

  Accuracy
  Unfortunately I do not have all the ideal tools for testing and measuring 
accuracy, but I do have some very good squares and 45 degree measure guides by
  Incra which are guaranteed to be highly accurate. When used along with these 
tools, the Wixey digital angle guide indeed proved accurate. I also tested
  it against the Beall Tilt Box, which we have also reviewed on this site, and 
both products delivered pretty much the same results. The Beall does have
  0.05 resolution and in one or two cases this was the difference between the 
two measurements, but basically, both tools delivered the same results. The
  Wixey unit is a little smaller than the Beall Tilt Box, so it is a little 
easier to handle. There are some other small differences, but you can read about
  those in the other review. Ultimately, it appears, to the best of my testing 
ability and resources, that the Wixey is indeed accurate to the claims made
  by the manufacturer, i.e. within +/- 0.1 degrees.

  Durability
  Well, I hadn't planned on including this section, but while taking photos of 
the tool for this review, I dropped the gauge from my miter saw blade. Long
  story short... the spring loaded blade guard on the saw slipped out of my 
fingers and retracted quickly knocking the gauge off the blade, fell a metre
  or more onto bare concrete. Ouch! Thankfully, when I picked up the gauge and 
set it back on the table, I had zeroed it to before, it again read a perfect
  0.0 degree setting! So, there appears to be some resistance to hard knocks 
and damage, which is a great thing!

  Conclusion
  Priced at US$39.99 the Wixey Digital Angle Gauge makes an excellent power 
tool accessory in the woodshop. You will be cutting more accurately, spending
  less time setting up, and ensuring your tool returns to square every time. 
Great little tool that no woodshop or anyone that owns power tools or 
cutting/drilling
  machines should be without.

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