This invention relates generally to woodworking tools and more specifically to marking gauges that are useful in various woodworking tasks.
A marking gauge is used to mark a line on a surface, where the line is parallel to the edge of the surface. In the case of woodworking, such marks are often made prior to sawing, chiseling or cutting the wood surface. Generally, marking gauges include a fence secured around a shaft. The fence is pressed against the edge of the surface as a sharp marker projecting down from one end of the shaft marks the line. Thus, the fence pressed against the surface edge keeps the marker a constant distance from that edge, allowing a parallel line to be marked. The shaft is typically labeled to show distance (i.e. 16ths of an inch) so that the distance of the line from the surface edge may be adjusted by adjusting the position of the fence along the marking gauge shaft.
Historically, marking gauges have employed a pin or knife-edge as a marker. Generally, pin markers are thought to have advantages when used to make marks along wood grain, and knife-edge cutters, including wheel and blade cutters, are thought to have advantages when used to make marks across wood grain. Wheel cutters are thought to offer advantages when marking shallow marks across the grain because they tend to leave clean mark lines without tearing fibers. Blade cutters are thought capable of cutting deeper in cases where a more pronounced cut or mark is required. Traditionally, blade cutters are fixed directly on the shaft of a marking gauge with a set screw, with the long edge of the blade parallel to the marker's fence. As a result, blade cutters tend to follow the wood grain, in many cases pushing the fence away from the workpiece.
A standard marking gauge is typically limited to a single type of marking method (i.e. pin marking, wheel cutter, or blade cutter). A number of tools perform one or two tasks such as trammels, marking and scribing gauges, but no single marking gauge is capable of performing all three operations with one tool.
This invention provides a marking gauge for marking a line parallel to an edge of a surface. The marking gauge has a shaft, a fence, and utilizes in the alternative one of three markers: a wheel cutter; a blade cutter; and a pin. The marking gauge has one or more marker connections that allow markers of different types to be utilized in the alternative to mark the desired line. The fence is attached to the marking gauge shaft and pressed against a workpiece edge so that the utilized marker is held a predetermined distance from the edge, making a mark parallel to the edge. A user may adjust the position of the fence along the shaft to adjust the distance of the parallel mark from the edge and may select the marker type to use for a particular task. For example, a pin marker may be selected to mark along wood grain, a blade cutter may be selected to deeply mark across wood grain, and a wheel cutter may be selected to make a clean, shallow mark across wood grain.
The selected marker may be secured to the marking gauge in a variety of ways. Preferably, the wheel cutter is secured to one the end of the shaft using a screw and the blade cutter and pin markers are removably and interchangeably secured near the other end of the shaft, using a chuck with a set screw. Other configurations are possible.
This invention also provides a chuck having several advantageous features. A swivel chuck feature allows the user to rotate or skew the edge of a cutting blade slightly away from the fence (e.g. 5 degrees). In use, the slightly skewed cutting blade causes the gauge to pull the fence against the workpiece as the cutting blade is moved along the workpiece. This provides particular advantages in deep grained wood workpieces by forcing the blade to follow the desired path rather than the grain of the wood. This invention also provides a depth-adjustable chuck feature that allows the cutting blade or pin to be adjusted to various depth projections. Both the position of the chuck in the shaft and the depth of the cutting blade or pin in the chuck can be adjusted providing a wide range of projection depths.
This invention also provides an offset fence feature that allows the fence to be positioned eccentric on the shaft of the marking gauge (i.e., the shaft hole through the fence is off-center). This maximizes the surface area of the fence in contact with the workpiece and limits any rolling of the marking gauge that may occur when it is laid on its side.
The marking gauge 8 shown in the Figures has a shaft 10, a fence 20 for contact with a workpiece edge, and marker connections that allow markers of different types to be utilized in the alternative to form the line being made with the gauge 8. A screw 40 attaches a wheel cutter 30, and a chuck 50 attaches a blade cutter 100, pin 80 or pencil lead 90. The screw 40 for the wheel cutter 30 and chuck 50 for the blade cutter 100, pin 80 or pencil lead 90 are located near opposite ends of the shaft 10. The fence 20 direction may be reversed so that it may be used with markers located near either end of the shaft 10.
The fence 20 may be approximately one inch in diameter and positioned eccentric on the shaft 10 (i.e., the hole through the fence is off-center) to maximize the surface area of the fence in contact with the workpiece and limit rolling of the marking gauge that may occur when it is laid on a work bench.
Components for a first marker type, a wheel cutter 30, are illustrated in
Components for additional marker types, a blade cutter 100, a pin cutter 80, and a pencil lead 90, are shown in
The use of a swivel chuck 50 allows a method of marking a line parallel to an edge of a surface that involves first positioning a marking gauge comprising a shaft 10, a fence 20, and a swivel chuck 50 such that the fence 20 presses up against the edge and the blade cutter 100 rests on the surface, with the swivel chuck 50 rotated about 5 degrees offset from parallel to the fence 20. The line on the surface is then marked by moving the marking gauge along the surface such that the fence 20 remains pressed against the edge and the marker remains pressed against the surface. The 5 degree offset (wider in the advancing direction) helps keep the fence 20 pressed against the edge during marking.
The depth of the chuck 50 in the hole 160 may be adjustable using the same set screw 70 used to secure the marker 80, pencil lead 90, or 100, within the opening 55 of the chuck 50. This allows the depth of the projection of the marker to be adjustable by changing the depth of the chuck 50 in the hole 160 and/or the depth of the marker 80, pencil lead 90, or 100 in opening 55 of the chuck 50. The chuck 50 is received in a through-hole 160 on the gauge shaft 10 and can be securely locked at varying positions/depths through the shaft 10 by tightening a set screw 70 located axially near the end of the shaft 10. For example, the set screw 70, when tightened, may secure a cutting blade 100 within a slot 55 in the chuck and press the chuck body against the wall of the hole 160. The combination of blade position in the slot and the adjustable depth of the chuck 50 on the shaft 10 accommodates projection ranges from near zero to ¼ inch or more.
The chuck 50 can also be used to secure a pin cutter 80 or pencil lead 90, which may have similar shapes so that either may be secured with the same structures. A small through hole 58 located in the center of the chuck 50 can receive a straight pin 80, pencil lead 90 for scratch marking. The hole 58 may pass through or intersect the slot 55 in the chuck 50 and may have a diameter that is slightly larger than the width of the slot 55. The interior shape of the chuck, with opening 55 and hole 58, allows the chuck 50 to secure a blade cutter 100 or a pin 80 or pencil lead 90. The chuck can have both an opening 55 that has a shape similar to the cross section of a blade cutter 100 so that a blade cutter 100 can be secured when the chuck 50 is tightened and a hole 58 with a shape similar to the cross section of the pin 80 so that when the chuck 50 is tighted the pin is secured.
The pin 80 or pencil lead 90 depth can be adjusted from zero to 0.5″ or more and can be locked into position with the set screw 70. As with the blade cutter 100, the depth of the pin 80, pencil lead 90 may be adjusted by adjusting both the depth of the chuck 50 in the shaft 10 and the depth of the pin 80, pencil lead 90 in the chuck 50.
The marking gauge of the present invention is preferably made of brass, but may be made of any suitable material or combination of materials.
The marking gauge components and methods of this invention are not confined to the embodiments described herein but includes variations and modifications within the scope and spirit of the foregoing description, the accompanying drawings and the following claims. For example, the components of the marking gauge may be made of any suitable material or combination of materials, e.g. metal, wood, plastic, or rubber. As another example, the fence and shaft may have any suitable shapes, e.g. circular, square, rectangular, and triangular. The fence or shaft may have holes, hollow portions, windows, markings, indicia of measurement, indicia of alignment, indicia of levelness, and other features and properties. Suitable variations and alternatives to the marking devices described herein are also possible. For example, a marker may scratch or write a line of a variety of widths.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/615,716, filed Oct. 4, 2004 and entitled “Marking Gauge,” which is incorporated by this reference.
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17403 | Williams | May 1857 | A |
36973 | Traut | Nov 1862 | A |
76884 | Brodhead | Apr 1868 | A |
141475 | Traut | Aug 1873 | A |
152488 | Hawley | Jun 1874 | A |
174879 | Vetterlein | Mar 1876 | A |
504003 | Traut | Aug 1893 | A |
602130 | Fuller | Apr 1898 | A |
799474 | Larson et al. | Sep 1905 | A |
869649 | Pringle | Oct 1907 | A |
5050306 | Renaud | Sep 1991 | A |
5197195 | Aikens | Mar 1993 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60615716 | Oct 2004 | US |