Best rotary lasers according to redditors
We found 8 Reddit comments discussing the best rotary lasers. We ranked the 6 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
We found 8 Reddit comments discussing the best rotary lasers. We ranked the 6 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.
They most likely use specific Drywall Screwdrivers which have a better version of that dimpler already built into the drill. Like this one
Thanks!
It's just a laser level. I picked it up when started this project. I used it for framing, tile, cutting in the niche and setting my shower doors plum. Great tool. http://amzn.com/B00NQUJ2AK
I got this laser, I just picked one of the stadia rods they recommended, I think it was $50 for 16ft.
The tripod is a little shaky, but it's usually a ways off to keep out of the way anyhow, and the detector is good for an insane distance.
I figure if I use this on 5-6 projects a year, it'll last forever. The first thing I'm going to upgrade is the tripod, when I get some spare cash from another project.
There is no such thing as an objectively ideal fit.
Fit is about balancing goals.
For someone in your situation (two bikes with different current setups) there are three major ways to start to explore this.
1 - Make the bikes identical, and start tweaking from there as you discover "problems" you want to try and address.
2 - Leave them different and compare and contrast.
3 - Use a camera with a timer or a friend to photograph you on the two bikes and start to look at current body position vs "goal" body position and evaluate your own fit.
I'm 110% with Andrewcooke that the way to start is a bunch of cheap stems. I have everything from 50 to 130 with a variety of angles at home. Cheap stems are $10 or less used. You only really need two seatposts (straight and setback) in your fit parts bin. (TBF, that's less and less true every year as 27.2 becomes less standard)
Using trig or this great stem comparison tool you can calculate the changes to stack and reach.
Using a $50 XY laser you can easily measure your own true stack and reach numbers, and transfer fits between bikes with different geometries.
The value of #3 is that a lot of fit (and why I have paid for a fit more than once) is about you, and the rotation of your hips, how you hold your arms, and how you position your body. Depending on hip rotation you can take a "good fit" and cause yourself pain.
And last, after all that aimless musing on my part, don't rush into this, there's nothing better than miles to help you decide on reach and stack.
Saddle height, that's a different issue, that's much more black and white.
https://www.amazon.com/Laser-PLS-60523-PLS3-Level-Yellow/dp/B00002259X
Something like that works. I've seen it in action.
Sure thing. It all depends on the pitch of the land but if you can find a level-ish spot that works for you, you can do the following:
What's next?
edits: link and word choice
Wow, prices have really come down since I last looked. I was looking at a few different Bosch models, and they all seemed good. Something like this
This is the one I have.
It may be overkill for your application.