If it were me, I would use several of those at the same time to do the job.You can buy those cheap 4 footers at Harbor Freight.
If it were me, I would use several of those at the same time to do the job.You can buy those cheap 4 footers at Harbor Freight.
I believe you mean the ceiling....Good thing your not in Australia, the balls would just fall on the floor.
Starrett 12-inch machinist levelI have a friend with a Diamond and wants a good level.
What kind of level should he look for?
Starrett 12-inch machinist level
Yes, comes in a red/white box.Thank you. I find them $200 dollar variety and around $1000.
I am assuming the $200 dollar one will work.
Honest question. Why do you people need to level your table so much? Is it because of the flooring you have them on? I had my diamond delivered almost 3 years ago and it still rolls absolutely perfect. It’s in my garage that has carpet over a concrete floor.
Way more. I think the level I use for my machine is around $1300 if purchased new.That's a lot of levels. Probably worth as much or more than your typical used GC. (not yours, of course).
I'm with you. My Gold Crown I was setup over 5 years ago and still rolls perfect. Same setup: detached garage, concrete floor, carpet tiles and a mini split AC.Honest question. Why do you people need to level your table so much? Is it because of the flooring you have them on? I had my diamond delivered almost 3 years ago and it still rolls absolutely perfect. It’s in my garage that has carpet over a concrete floor.
Huh? You think Glen Hancock doesn’t know his shit?did he wear a tin-foil hat while working??? WTF. that's some loonie shit right there.
I always use a laser level and five set squares on the table… one near each corner and one in the middle.
I find this strategy quick and extremely effective to a high level of accuracy.
Seems like overkill imo.Yes, comes in a red/white box.
My basement floor has a crack in it. Nothing that leaks or anything but when seasons change I have to adjust one leg. It's not a huge adjustment, at most 1 full turn on the leveling leg. I generally re-level about every 2 months and check the rails are still torqued at that point.Honest question. Why do you people need to level your table so much? Is it because of the flooring you have them on? I had my diamond delivered almost 3 years ago and it still rolls absolutely perfect. It’s in my garage that has carpet over a concrete floor.
If it's a ProAm, I would bet my life that it doesn't roll absolutely perfect. You probably just haven't noticed the subtleties. I'm not knocking you, by any means... Most people don't notice the subtle drifts.Honest question. Why do you people need to level your table so much? Is it because of the flooring you have them on? I had my diamond delivered almost 3 years ago and it still rolls absolutely perfect. It’s in my garage that has carpet over a concrete floor.
Solid wood is going to move more than plywood as the way plywood is made its more stable than solid wood. So a GC would move more than a Pro-AmIf it's a ProAm, I would bet my life that it doesn't roll absolutely perfect. You probably just haven't noticed the subtleties. I'm not knocking you, by any means... Most people don't notice the subtle drifts.
A ProAm has a plywood cabinet. It will move, throughout the seasons. I have a 9' ProAm, in my shop. It moves quite a bit, despite being in a controlled environment, on a concrete floor. The rolls may not be super noticeable, when playing. However, the levels don't lie. And, if you really take a close look, with a few slow-rolling balls, you'll see some drift.
actually they would fall to the ceilingGood thing your not in Australia, the balls would just fall on the floor.