Skip to content

Engineers Square, Combination Square & Workshop Steel Rule Guide: DIN 875 Accuracy Grades, Reversal Testing & Precision Measurement for AU Workshops

Precision measurement starts with the square and the rule. Get the right tools and your fits are square, your cuts are dimensioned, your marking-out is accurate. Use the wrong tools — or precision tools that have drifted from accuracy — and every downstream step amplifies the error. This guide covers Engineers Squares (fixed 90° reference), Combination Squares (adjustable multi-angle), and Engineers Steel Rules (precision marking-out) — three foundational workshop measurement tools — across the full P&N, Maxigear, Trax, Dasqua, and TTL AU range. DIN 875 accuracy grades, reversal-method testing, and AU brand selection grounded in what you actually need.

An engineer's square and a try square look similar but are built for different work. An engineer's square is precision-ground hardened steel with a stock and blade fixed permanently at 90°, manufactured to DIN 875 accuracy grades 00, 0, 1, or 2. A try square has a wooden or composite stock with a steel blade and is intended for woodworking — checking timber for square, not for precision metal marking out. Engineer's squares are also used to verify other measurement tools using the reversal method.

Engineer's Square vs Try Square — At a Glance

Feature Engineer's square Try square
Material Hardened tool steel, precision ground Wood / composite stock, steel blade
Accuracy standard DIN 875 grades 00 / 0 / 1 / 2 Not graded — visual checking only
Typical use Machinist setting, metal marking out, machine alignment Carpentry, joinery, framing
Tolerance (300mm blade) 3–18 µm out of square (grade dependent) Not specified
Used for reversal check Yes — used to test other squares No — would not survive the test

What is an engineers square?

An engineers square is a fixed-angle precision measurement tool with a stock (the thick base) and a blade set at exactly 90° to the stock. Used for verifying squareness of machined parts, setting up workpieces against a reference edge, scribing lines perpendicular to an edge, and as the precision reference when checking other angle-measurement tools. Engineers squares are governed by DIN 875 — the international precision standard — with four tolerance grades from Grade 00 (calibration master) through Grade 2 (general workshop).

The fixed 90° angle is what distinguishes an engineers square from a combination square (adjustable head, multi-angle) or a try square (carpentry tool, similar geometry but loose tolerance). Engineers squares are the precision reference at 90°; they do nothing else, and they do it well. Stainless steel construction is standard for AU industrial use — carbon steel rusts in workshop environments and dimensionally drifts with temperature.

Engineers square vs combination square vs try square — the disambiguation

Three measurement tools get confused — they look similar but have different purposes, different accuracy levels, and different AU industrial use cases. Use the wrong one and your fit-up either fails accuracy or wastes time.

Tool Geometry Accuracy Best for AIMS examples
Engineers Square Fixed 90° stock-and-blade DIN 875 Grade 00 to Grade 2 (0.005–0.07mm tolerance) Precision reference for machined parts, squareness verification, scribing 90° lines, setting up workpieces P&N 267SG1006 Graduated 150mm ($32.54), P&N 267SR1006 Non-Graduated 150mm ($24.93)
Combination Square Sliding head on graduated rule — 90° + 45° + adjustable angles via protractor head Lower than fixed engineers square — typically ±0.1mm or so (depends on brand) Multi-function — marking 45° and 90° lines, depth measurement, levelling (some heads include a vial), scribing parallel to an edge P&N 267CS3030 3-In-1 Stainless Steel ($103.22), Trax ARX-CS300C Economic Set ($45.50)
Try Square Fixed 90° — usually carpentry tool with wooden stock and steel blade Loose (±0.5mm typical) — carpentry tolerance, not engineering Carpentry, joinery, rough framing where engineering accuracy isn't required Not stocked at AIMS — carpentry tier, see Bunnings/Total Tools/specialist woodworking retailers

The decision rule: precision workshop work = engineers square or combination square; carpentry = try square. The two AIMS-stocked tools (engineers + combination) cover all AU industrial precision measurement needs from machined component inspection through to general marking-out.

DIN 875 accuracy grades — 00, 0, 1, 2 explained

DIN 875 is the international standard governing engineers square accuracy. It defines four tolerance classes — 00, 0, 1, and 2 (sometimes written GG 00, GG 0, GG 1, GG 2) — with progressively looser allowable deviation from true 90°. Grade 00 is the most accurate (calibration-grade); Grade 2 is the workshop standard for general use.

Grade Tolerance @ 150mm blade Recommended use Typical workshop application
DIN 875/00 ~0.004 mm Calibration master — checking other squares Calibration labs, metrology rooms, inspection departments. Rarely seen in production workshops.
DIN 875/0 ~0.008 mm Precision inspection Tool rooms, fitting shops, precision-grade quality control
DIN 875/1 ~0.018 mm Workshop precision Skilled trade, machinist workshop, fitting and turning
DIN 875/2 ~0.070 mm General workshop General workshop precision measurement, marking-out, light squareness checks

Workshop reality: the UK Workshop forum consensus is that Grade 2 "has always been recognised as being quite sufficient for normal workshop use." Most AU industrial workshops standardise on Grade 2 or Grade 1 for everyday use; tool rooms keep a Grade 0 for periodic verification of the workshop squares.

P&N workshop engineers squares are typically Grade 2 standard — the right tier for general AU industrial workshop use at workshop-tier pricing. For Grade 0 precision-inspection-grade work, source through our supplier network on request (Mitutoyo, Starrett, PEC Tools and similar premium brands).

Graduated vs non-graduated engineers squares

Graduated engineers squares have a measurement scale etched along the blade edge — useful for marking out and dimensioning. Non-graduated engineers squares are pure right-angle reference tools. Choose graduated when you need to scribe at a specific distance from an edge; choose non-graduated when you want the absolute most accurate reference square (no etching deformation along the blade).

Type Blade marking Trade-off AIMS examples
Graduated ("SG" series at P&N) Etched mm/inch graduations along the blade Versatile — marks distance AND squareness, but the etching slightly affects blade rigidity at the microscopic level P&N 267SG1004 100mm Graduated ($22.60), P&N 267SG1006 150mm Graduated ($32.54), P&N 267SG1008 200mm Graduated ($44.00)
Non-graduated ("SR" series at P&N) Plain polished blade — no markings Most accurate reference — no etching means no micro-deformation. The square's only purpose is the angle. P&N 267SR1004 100mm Non-Graduated ($20.60), P&N 267SR1006 150mm Non-Graduated ($24.93), P&N 267SR1008 200mm Non-Graduated ($39.38)

Workshop rule: get one of each in 150mm — graduated for marking, non-graduated for reference. The P&N SG1006 ($32.54) + SR1006 ($24.93) combo at ~$58 total covers the everyday workshop measurement spectrum. Beyond that, the Maxigear Engineers Square ($17.36) is the budget-tier entry option for occasional use or hobby work.

Size selection — 100mm, 150mm, 200mm and larger

Engineers square blade length matches the workpiece size — too short and you can't reference enough length; too long and the square is unwieldy and overpriced for the job. AU industrial standard sizes are 100mm, 150mm, 200mm, 300mm (specialty), with 150mm being the workshop default.

Blade length Workpiece size range Typical use AIMS pricing
100mm (4") Small components — bearings, fittings, machined parts up to ~50mm Tool room, small-part inspection, mini-machinist work P&N $20.60–$22.60
150mm (6") — workshop standard General workshop — components up to ~100mm General machinist, fitting, marking out, daily workshop use P&N $24.93–$32.54
200mm (8") Larger components — fabricated parts, plate work, structural sections up to ~150mm Fabrication, sheet metal, larger machined components P&N $39.38–$44.00
300mm+ Sheet metal, large fabrications, structural plate Specialty — source on request Contact AIMS for sourcing

The 150mm size is the most-recommended single purchase for AU workshops. It handles 80% of workshop measurement work — anything from bearing seat squareness to fabrication corner checks. Add 100mm later for small-part work, 200mm later for fabrication.

Combination squares — the multi-function alternative

A combination square is a precision rule with a sliding head that can be locked at any position along the rule — providing 90° and 45° reference angles plus depth measurement, parallel line scribing, and (on premium heads) level vials and protractor heads. The trade-off versus a fixed engineers square: more versatile, slightly less accurate, larger footprint.

The combination square shines in marking-out and layout work where you need to:

  • Scribe a line parallel to an edge at a specific distance (set the rule, lock the head, scribe)
  • Mark a 45° line (use the 45° face of the head)
  • Measure depth into a slot or hole (use the rule blade)
  • Check level (if the head includes a vial)
  • Set protractor angles (premium heads with adjustable protractor)

AIMS combination square range (4 products in /collections/combination-squares covering the full price tier):

The P&N 267CS3030 ($103.22) is the premium workshop centrepiece — three heads (square 90°, mitre 45°, protractor with adjustable angle), stainless steel construction, AU industrial precision tooling. It's the buy-once combination square for serious workshop use.

Engineers Steel Rules — the precision marking-out tool

An engineers steel rule is a thin, flexible, hardened-stainless-steel ruler with precision-etched graduations on both edges — designed for marking-out and measurement to ±0.1mm or better. The key distinction from a carpentry rule or hardware-store ruler is etching precision: engineers rules are laser-etched to defined tolerance; cheap rules can be ±0.5mm or worse, which is meaningless for engineering work.

Engineers steel rules are used for:

  • Marking dimensions on workpieces before cutting
  • Setting calipers, micrometers, and other instruments to a reference dimension
  • Measuring straight distances directly
  • Checking flatness/straightness of edges (a precision rule + light source)
  • Working in combination with engineers squares for marking-out at 90°

AIMS stocks P&N stainless steel engineers rules across all four common workshop lengths:

All four rules are dual-edge graduated (typically mm one edge, inches the other) on hardened stainless steel. The 300mm at $9.52 is the everyday workshop rule — most workshops stock at least one per bench.

Steel rule lengths — 150mm, 300mm, 600mm, 1000mm and when to use each

Match steel rule length to the work you're measuring — too short and you can't reach the dimension; too long and you can't fit the rule on the workpiece. Workshops typically run two or three rules across the length range.

Rule length Best for Workshop placement AIMS pricing
150mm (6") Pocket reference, small-part work, dimension transfers between tools In every machinist's apron pocket $3.42
300mm (12") — workshop default General workshop marking-out, dimensioning, instrument setup One per bench minimum $9.52
600mm (24") Fabrication, plate work, large components, sheet metal marking Fabrication workshops, sheet metal shops $22.02
1000mm (39") Long-bar marking, structural sections, sheet metal, full-length plate measurement Fabrication-heavy workshops, structural workshops $36.79

A solid workshop steel rule kit: 150mm pocket + 300mm bench + 600mm fabrication = ~$35 total for full length coverage.

Stainless steel vs carbon steel rules and squares

For AU industrial workshop use, stainless steel is the only sensible choice — carbon steel rusts in humid workshops, oils stain the surface, and dimensional stability over temperature is poorer. The cost premium for stainless over carbon steel is small (often 10-20%) and the service life is 10× longer in typical workshop conditions.

All AIMS-stocked engineers squares and steel rules are stainless steel. P&N specifically uses hardened stainless steel for the cutting edge of rules (resists wear from scribing) and high-quality stainless construction throughout for squares.

The carbon-steel option is occasionally seen in entry-tier squares (older Maxigear and similar generic-brand workshop tools). Acceptable for very occasional hobby use; not recommended for AU industrial workshops where the rule sits in an oily environment for years.

How to test engineers square accuracy — the reversal method

The reversal method is the universal workshop technique for testing engineers square accuracy without specialised equipment. Set the square against a known-straight reference edge, scribe a line along the blade, flip the square 180° and re-scribe — any deviation between the two lines is twice the actual squareness error. The technique is field-validated across decades of machinist forum consensus ("squares are self-checking" — Practical Machinist).

The method, step by step:

  1. Find a known-straight reference edge — the long edge of a steel rule, a straight-edge, a granite surface plate edge, or a known-straight machined surface. The reference must be truly straight; a poor reference edge invalidates the test.
  2. Place the stock of the engineers square firmly against the reference edge. Press the stock flush against the edge — no gaps, no light visible between the stock face and the edge.
  3. Scribe a fine line along the blade using a sharp scriber on the workpiece (usually a piece of clean steel plate or a scribe-marked surface).
  4. Lift the square and reverse it 180° — so the stock is now flipped against the same reference edge but pointing the opposite direction.
  5. Press the stock flush against the reference edge again.
  6. Scribe a second line along the blade — ideally on top of the first line.
  7. Read the result. If the two lines are coincident (or invisibly close), the square is accurate. If they diverge, the gap between the lines = 2 × the actual squareness error. So a 0.05mm gap means a 0.025mm error. A perfect Grade 2 square (0.07mm tolerance) would show up to 0.14mm gap at 150mm blade length.

Practical Machinist forum direct quote: "T squares, framing squares, combination squares are commonly checked by the reversal method... this is a double error demonstrating that squares are indeed self-checking." The technique works on any kind of square — engineers, combination, framing, try, machinist.

Precision testing setup — granite plate + 1-2-3 blocks + DTI

For inspection-grade square verification beyond what the reversal method can resolve, the standard setup is a granite surface plate + 1-2-3 blocks + dial test indicator. This is the metrology-room method used by precision inspectors and tool rooms.

Setup:

  1. Granite surface plate as the reference flat (AA grade ~0.00025mm flatness)
  2. 1-2-3 blocks — precision-ground hardened steel blocks (1" × 2" × 3" — multiple sizes available) used as setup-grade reference standards. Two blocks support a precision shaft.
  3. Silver steel bar (or precision ground rod) sitting between the 1-2-3 blocks — this becomes the perfectly vertical reference.
  4. Push the square's stock against the silver steel bar. Set up a dial test indicator (DTI) on a mag-base.
  5. Run the DTI along the blade. Note the reading at the top and the bottom of the blade.
  6. Reverse the square — flip it 180° — and repeat. If the DTI reads identical values both ways, the square is square. Any difference = the squareness error.

This setup resolves errors down to 0.001mm — well beyond Grade 00 tolerance. For workshops without granite plates, the reversal method on a precision steel rule edge gets within 0.01mm and is sufficient for verifying Grade 1 and Grade 2 squares.

Square care and accuracy preservation

Engineers squares stay accurate only as long as they're handled with discipline — drop a square on a concrete workshop floor and its accuracy may be permanently compromised, even if no visible damage exists. Workshop discipline for precision measurement tools:

  • Dedicated storage — a drawer or rack where the square sits without contact against other tools. Not loose in a toolbox.
  • Never on the floor — the most common cause of accuracy drift is impact from accidental drops. Treat as a precision instrument.
  • Never lent out — even to careful colleagues. You can't control someone else's handling. Workshop rule: precision squares are personal kit.
  • Light oil film for storage — particularly in humid workshops. Wipe with a lightly-oiled rag before storage. Stainless steel rusts surprisingly fast in workshop conditions.
  • Periodic accuracy check — reversal method monthly for daily-use squares, more often if dropped or damaged. A square that's drifted is no longer fit for precision work and needs to be replaced or sent to calibration.
  • No clamping or vice work with squares — squares are reference tools, not workshop tools. Don't pry, lever, or use as a straight-edge for cutting.

A well-cared-for P&N or Maxigear engineers square lasts 20+ years of workshop service. A dropped or abused square may need replacement within months.

AU brand reality — P&N + Maxigear + Trax + TTL + Dasqua

Brand Origin AIMS range Tier Strength
P&N AU industrial precision tooling 10 SKUs — 6 engineers squares + 4 steel rules + 1 combination square AU industrial workshop standard Workshop-grade stainless steel, DIN 875 Grade 2 typical, well-priced. The AU patriot brand for workshop precision measurement.
Maxigear AU workshop value 1 engineers square Budget Entry-tier engineers square for occasional use, hobby workshops, or backup square. $17.36 is the AIMS entry pricing.
Trax AU workshop / pneumatic specialty 1 combination square set Workshop value Economic combination square set — full kit at workshop pricing ($45.50).
Dasqua Premium specialty 1 combination square (cast iron) Specialty Cast iron set specialty — for very specific applications where cast iron construction matters (vibration damping, mass).
TTL Budget workshop 1 combination square Entry budget $12.60 — pure entry-tier for occasional combination square work.

Honest scope — NOT stocked at AIMS: Starrett (US precision gold standard, ~$200-$500 per square), Mitutoyo (Japanese precision, ~$150-$350), PEC Tools (US workshop premium), Moore & Wright (UK heritage brand), Kinex K-MET (Czech DIN 875/0 specialists), Fowler. For these specialty premium brands, AIMS can source through the supplier network on request.

Adjacent precision tools — centering squares, straight edges, carpenter squares & builder triangles

The precision measurement category extends beyond engineers squares, combination squares and rules — workshops also use centering squares, straight edges, builder triangles and carpenter rule squares for specific layout, setup, and reference tasks. AIMS stocks the full adjacent range in the parent Precision Rules & Squares collection (36 products) — the broader workshop precision tooling category.

Centering squares — finding the centre of a round bar or shaft

A centering square is a specialty layout tool with a V-notch and a scribing edge — placed on the end of a round bar, the V-notch self-centres on the shaft axis and the scribing edge marks a diameter line through the centre. Scribe two perpendicular lines and the intersection IS the centre of the round bar. Used for layout work on shaft ends, before drilling centre holes, or before turning on a lathe.

AIMS stocks the Maxigear Centering Square ($48.30) — workshop-precision centering square for AU industrial workshops needing centre-finding on round stock up to 100mm diameter.

Straight edges — the precision reference for flatness and straightness checks

Straight edges are precision-machined reference bars used to verify flatness of mating surfaces and straightness of long features. Press the straight edge against a surface, sight along the join (light gap = deviation), or use feeler gauges to measure the gap directly. Premium straight edges are lapped to ±0.005mm flatness — calibration-grade tooling for tool rooms and inspection departments.

AIMS stocks the Maxigear straight edge range across four specification tiers:

Straight edges this calibre are workshop investment tools — bought once, last decades when properly stored. Use them for verifying surface plate flatness, checking long machined surfaces for waviness, qualifying scraping work on hand-scraped surfaces, or as the reference for setting up larger machinery.

Builder triangles and carpenter rule squares — larger reference tools

For larger workshop reference work — fabrication corner checks, sheet metal layout, large-format marking-out — builder triangles and carpenter rule squares provide bigger reference surfaces than handheld engineers squares. They trade precision (these are typically ±0.5–1mm tolerance, not DIN 875 Grade 1/2) for size coverage.

AIMS builder triangle and carpenter square range:

Use case rule: precision fitting + machined parts = engineers square (DIN 875). Layout + carpentry + fabrication = builder triangle or carpenter rule square. Different accuracy tiers, different tools, both have legitimate workshop roles.

Specialty rules and tape measures

Beyond P&N engineers rules, AIMS stocks additional ruler/tape products for specific applications:

Dasqua Cast Iron Combination Set — premium multi-head combination tool

The Dasqua Cast Iron Combination Set is the premium combination square option at AIMS — a full Starrett-style set with cast iron heads (for vibration damping and mass-stability), a precision-ground rule, and modular protractor and centre-finder heads. Pricing tier sits between the workshop P&N 3-In-1 ($103) and inspection-grade specialty brands (Starrett #11 set $300+). Cast iron construction is the distinguishing feature — it absorbs vibration on a milling-machine setup and provides mass-stability for accurate measurement on heavy machined parts.

AIMS stocks the Dasqua Cast Iron Set as a full kit plus individual replacement components:

The full Dasqua set ($165.20) is the AU industrial premium combination set — the buy-once option for serious workshops doing precision multi-angle layout, machining setup, and inspection work. Cast iron mass + 300mm rule + 3 heads covers everything a Starrett-style combination set would, at workshop-tier AU pricing rather than Starrett's $300-$500+.

AIMS supply ladder — three tiers

Tier 1 — Occasional / small workshop ($3–$25):

Tier 2 — Regular workshop / tradie ($24–$50):

Tier 3 — Premium / production workshop ($100+):

The full engineers squares collection, combination squares collection, and the broader precision rules & squares collection (36 products including straight edges, centering squares, builder triangles and specialty rules) cover the complete current stock.

Common mistakes — failure modes table

Mistake What goes wrong Fix
Using a carpentry try square for engineering work ±0.5mm accuracy is engineering-noise level; fits and dimensions drift visibly Use engineers square for any precision work; try square for carpentry only.
Buying carbon steel instead of stainless Rusts in workshop humidity, oil stains, dimensional drift Stainless steel is the AU industrial standard. P&N range is all stainless.
Dropping the square on the floor Accuracy may be permanently compromised even without visible damage Dedicated storage, treat as precision instrument, reversal-check after any drop.
Using square as straight-edge or pry tool Blade deformation, accuracy lost Squares are reference tools only. Use a straight-edge or pry bar for those jobs.
No periodic accuracy check Square drifts over time; user doesn't know until a job goes wrong Reversal method check monthly for daily-use squares.
Wrong size for the work 100mm square on 200mm workpiece = inadequate reference; 200mm square on 50mm part = unwieldy Match blade length to workpiece. 150mm is the workshop default; add 100mm and 200mm as needed.
Using Bunnings carpentry rule for engineering marking-out ±0.5mm or worse edge tolerance = engineering-noise level Precision steel rule (P&N MS-series) for any engineering work.
Buying a graduated square when accuracy matters most Etched scale slightly reduces blade rigidity at the microscopic level Non-graduated (SR series) for pure reference; graduated (SG series) for marking-out where you also want a measurement scale.

Adjacent precision measurement tools — when a square isn't the right tool

Engineers squares verify 90° angles and provide a straight reference. For other precision measurements:

The engineers square is the foundation of the precision measurement kit — fixed 90° reference. The other instruments build on that foundation for specific dimensional measurements.

Bunnings carpentry square vs precision engineers square

Bunnings, Total Tools, and hardware-store carpentry squares are different products from precision engineers squares — different accuracy class, different intended use, different price point. A carpentry square is fine for framing, joinery, and rough construction work; it's not adequate for engineering, machining, or precision fitting.

Aspect Bunnings carpentry square P&N engineers square
Accuracy ±0.5mm to ±1mm typical (carpentry tolerance) DIN 875 Grade 2 (~0.07mm) or Grade 1 (~0.018mm) — engineering tolerance
Material Often coated steel, plastic stock Hardened stainless steel throughout
Stock construction Wooden or plastic stock, pressed-in blade Solid stainless steel stock, precision-machined to blade
Use case Framing, joinery, decking, carpentry Machining, fitting, fabrication precision, marking-out
Price $10–$30 $17–$44 (Maxigear / P&N) — Premium $100+ (Starrett / Mitutoyo)

The price difference is small but the accuracy difference is order-of-magnitude. For workshop precision work, the carpentry square just isn't fit for purpose. Spend the extra $10-$20 once and you've got the right tool for 20+ years.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an engineers square and what's it used for?

An engineers square is a fixed-angle precision measurement tool — a stock and a blade set at exactly 90° to each other. Used for verifying squareness of machined parts, setting up workpieces against a reference edge, scribing 90° lines, and as a precision reference for checking other angle-measurement tools. Governed by DIN 875 international standard.

What's the difference between an engineers square and a combination square?

An engineers square has a FIXED 90° angle — single purpose, highest accuracy, used as a reference standard. A combination square has a SLIDING head on a graduated rule, providing 90° + 45° + adjustable angles via a protractor head — more versatile, slightly less accurate, useful for marking-out at various angles. Both AIMS-stocked. Engineers square for precision reference; combination square for multi-angle marking-out.

What does DIN 875 mean on a square?

DIN 875 is the international standard governing engineers square accuracy. Four tolerance classes: 00 (calibration-grade), 0 (precision inspection), 1 (workshop precision), 2 (general workshop). At 150mm blade: Grade 00 ~0.004mm, Grade 0 ~0.008mm, Grade 1 ~0.018mm, Grade 2 ~0.070mm. Grade 2 is the standard for normal AU industrial workshop use.

How accurate is a Grade 2 engineers square?

~0.070mm deviation from true 90° at 150mm blade length — sufficient for general workshop precision work, marking-out, light squareness checks. Grade 2 is what P&N workshop engineers squares are typically built to. For tool-room inspection, step up to Grade 0 (Starrett or Mitutoyo, source through AIMS supplier network).

What's the difference between graduated and non-graduated engineers squares?

Graduated squares (P&N "SG" series) have a measurement scale etched along the blade — useful for marking out at a specific distance from an edge. Non-graduated squares (P&N "SR" series) have a plain polished blade — most accurate pure right-angle reference, no etching micro-deformation. Workshop rule: get one of each in 150mm.

What size engineers square do I need for general workshop use?

150mm (6") is the AU workshop default — handles 80% of workshop measurement work, fits in most workshops, reasonably priced. Add 100mm later for small-part work, 200mm later for larger fabrication. The P&N 267SG1006 ($32.54) graduated + 267SR1006 ($24.93) non-graduated combo at ~$58 covers the everyday workshop measurement spectrum.

How do I test if my engineers square is accurate?

The reversal method. Place the square's stock against a known-straight reference edge, scribe a line along the blade. Lift the square, reverse it 180°, press against the same edge, scribe a second line. Any gap between the two lines = 2× the actual squareness error. So 0.05mm gap = 0.025mm error. The technique works without special equipment and is the universal workshop accuracy check.

Should I buy a stainless steel or carbon steel engineers square?

Stainless steel — every time. Carbon steel rusts in workshop humidity, oil stains the surface, dimensional drift over temperature is worse. The cost premium for stainless is small (10-20%) and the service life is 10× longer in AU industrial workshops. All AIMS-stocked engineers squares and steel rules are stainless steel.

What's a try square vs engineers square?

A try square is a fixed 90° carpentry tool with a wooden or plastic stock and steel blade — ±0.5mm typical accuracy, used for framing, joinery, decking. An engineers square is a fixed 90° precision instrument with stainless steel construction — DIN 875 Grade 1 or 2 accuracy, used for machining and fitting. Same geometry; different accuracy class and different use case.

Can I use a Bunnings combination square for engineering work?

Generally no. Hardware-store combination squares typically have ±0.5mm to ±1mm accuracy — carpentry tolerance. Engineering work needs precision tooling at DIN 875 Grade 1 or 2 (or equivalent for combination squares). The TTL CS150 ($12.60), Trax ARX-CS300C ($45.50), or P&N 267CS3030 ($103.22) at AIMS are workshop-precision grade.

How long do engineers squares stay accurate?

A well-cared-for engineers square stays accurate for 20+ years of normal workshop service. Dropped, dropped onto concrete, used as a pry tool, or stored loose with other tools — the accuracy can drift in months. Discipline: dedicated storage, never lent out, reversal-method check after any impact or annually.

Can a damaged engineers square be repaired?

Premium brands (Starrett, Mitutoyo, PEC) can be sent back for re-truing — typically at the manufacturer or specialised metrology service. Workshop-tier squares (P&N, Maxigear) replace rather than repair — the cost of professional re-truing exceeds the cost of a new square in this tier.

What's the best length steel rule for workshop use?

300mm (12") is the AU workshop default — fits in toolbox, handles most marking-out, reasonably priced ($9.52). A typical workshop setup: 150mm pocket rule + 300mm bench rule + 600mm fabrication rule = ~$35 total for full coverage. The P&N 267MS-series at AIMS is the AU industrial standard for stainless steel precision rules.

Why does a precision steel rule cost more than a hardware-store ruler?

Precision etching tolerance. Engineers rules are laser-etched to ±0.1mm or better; hardware-store rulers can be ±0.5mm or worse. For engineering marking-out, the precision matters. A $9.52 P&N 300mm precision rule replaces a $5 hardware ruler that's not accurate enough for engineering work. The cost difference is small; the accuracy difference is order-of-magnitude.

What's the best brand of engineers square in Australia?

P&N is the AU industrial workshop standard — DIN 875 Grade 2 accuracy, stainless steel construction, workshop-tier pricing ($17-$44). The 267SG/SR series covers all common workshop sizes. Maxigear is the budget entry-tier ($17.36) for occasional use. For premium inspection-grade tooling (Starrett, Mitutoyo, PEC, Moore & Wright), AIMS sources through the supplier network on request.

Previous Post Next Post
Previous Post Next Post
Welcome to our store
Welcome to our store
Welcome to our store
Quote Cart