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Deleted member 174758
Brad awls aren't for marking - they are for piloting holes and are only suitable for rough carpentry at that. The proper tool for marking is a marking knife, which has a bevel on one side of the blade alone. British makes include Crown, Joseph Marples, etc. But these need to be used against a steel edge such as a mitre square or a combination squareObviously the best way to remove pencil marks, would be to not make any pencil marks in the first place. What can I use instead? Something to score a line like a bradawl? Or is there a special carpetnters tool for the job?
That depends on the job, B-A. If I've got a good cutter with me I can tell him to saw "dead to size" and he'll saw me a beading bang to length with no mark visible. Variations in buildings and mitre saws mean that I sometimes instruct the cut to be made "fat" (1mm over, but still no mark if is is finish work) so that I can trim dead to size with a sharp bock planeTechnically speaking you cut out half the mark on the waste side if you mark exactly on the measurement, otherwise you are half the mark short on your length
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