> From: Steven Malikoff > That's the first actual photo I've seen of the foot, and I see what you > mean.
Oh, I can take more, then; let me know what you need. > Let's regard the inner vertical surface where it mates to the rack as > the normal surface. Right; that's our reference plane. > If you have a length of something straight .. clamp it with a .. clamp > to that inner surface Umm, not possible. There are two diagonal (in the horizontal plane) ribs coming off that surface, so there's no way to clamp anything vertical to it. The _front_ (outer) surface, parallel to the reference plane, I could get to (and the clamp is a good idea). Here's what I wound up with: http://ana-3.lcs.mit.edu/~jnc/tech/jpg/StabilizerMeasurement.jpg (Yes, yes, I know, tha assumes the back face of the square is parallel to the front; it is, pretty much - I checked with a vernier calipers.) So the vertical distance from the horizontal plane at the bottom of the stabilizer, at its tip, to the bottom of the 'outer surface' (as above), is 17/32". The distance from the plane of the 'outer surface' to the end of the stabilizer is 7-9/16". The distance between the reference plane and the 'outer surface' is 7.14mm (one thing I _could_ get a vernier calipers on :-). Also, it turns out the right-hand vertical face of the stabilizer is _not_ perpendicular to the reference plane! The foot angles in slightly. The outer vertical surface is a plane along its entire length, so it's hard to notice unless you put a square on it directly: http://ana-3.lcs.mit.edu/~jnc/tech/jpg/StabilizerAngled.jpg (Sorry about the lens distortion; wanted to show that the square was along the reference plane.) I couldn't get anything clamped on to make the measurement, but the tip of the stabilizer is about 1/2" (to a /32nd, or so) in from a vertical plane perpendicular to the reference plane, and situated at the right-most location on the foot (i.e. along the edge of the square, in that photo). > A pencil rubbing on paper, or paper creasing slong eges then drawn over > with a ruler can also help to get angled surfaces. Sorry, couldn't figure that out? > Another thing, CAD can make good use of non-perpendicular measurements. > So if you're able to measure something across a diagonal or at some odd > angle, then please do so. It can be used to triangulate and improve > other taken measurements, like a point cloud. What other measurements should I take? One easy/obvious one is from the right-hand outer bottom corner of the stabilizer to the left-hand bottom corner of the reference plane: that's 8-9/32". (A lot of these corners are rounded, so exact measurements are a matter of choice....) The top inner corner of the right-hand face is 9-11/32" from the bottom outer corner of that face (same corner as above). Noel