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Measuring, Marking, and Layout: A Builder's Guide


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Written by: John Carroll

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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 694
ISBN: 1561583359
Model: 070464
Number Of Pages: 218
Publication Date: 2001-12-31
Publisher: Taunton Press
Release Date: 1998-10-01


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Editorial Reviews:

-- Provides simple techniques for accurate measuring using a number of basic tools



User Comments about the Measuring, Marking, and Layout: A Builder's Guide

The book informed me of many thing I was not aware of when survaying is being done. Great book and I would recomend it for anyone interested in learning about survaying. It covers from basic to advanced material.



I was a bit dissapointed in this book. May be fine for the novice home improvement crowd. Being in the building trades I was hoping to get a couple of good tips or techniques i hadn't come across. Much of the information and processes in the book I would consider outdated or too inaccurate for commercial use.



It is indispensable. The point of this book is to understand the fundamentals so you can be effective, efficient and flexible at any project you are a part of. Some of the techniques in this book are centuries old and some are tricks developed by builders of the 20th century. Stop reading these reviews and buy this book right now. Once you get it, read it. It is geared toward home building and carpentry but anyone in construction would benefit from it, even if you use a laser theodolite. Read it again a few years later.Saying this book is outdated is like saying the Pythagorean theorem is outdated.



Learn to layout. Different techniques, good practice. Really just a good reference book. If you are a carpenter then you must know how to layout correctly.



John Carroll makes the reader think about accuracy when approaching any building project. This factor, and his humble writing style and experience as a craftsman, will make this book an international best seller for anybody who will pick up a saw, rafter gauge,or masonary hammer. In conclusion this excellent book makes you think and visualize what you want to achieve before you start the job. This is a well written book, in plain language. The book is a must for anyone who needs important tips on construction methods.


It will help any amateur considering building, or constructing brick, or wooden structures, or extensions. He provides many simple easy-to-understand methods on how and what, to measure. He shows many examples of how simple miscalculations can result in costly errors. Unlike other American DIY books, that pretend the metric system does not exist, Carroll covers imperial for the home market and metric conversions for the rest of the world.