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Thread: water level

  1. #1
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    Default water level

    A browse through hardware stores or catalogs always turns up a plethora (I love big words) of electronic and optical leveling devices. Although these are coming within reach, financially, of the handyman the simple water level and bubble level still have a place as low cost but accurate devices.

    I will assume that everyone knows how to use a bubble level and even strap it to a long straight edge to achieve a fair degree of accuracy but I still meet people who denigrate the water level as too old fashioned and are then amazed at the accuracy and ease of use (especially around corners) of my one man only water level, which I made more than 20yrs ago.

    I got the idea from a ceiling fixer who used a paint bucket for the reservoir but I made mine a sealed unit using 300mm of 150mm dia copper pipe and 2 taps. I also mixed toilet blue (can you still get this) to make it easier to see and stop the water from going off and staining the tube (sanitized) .

    To use, hang the reservoir at eye height then tape or clamp a stick to the hose end with the end of the stick on your datum (pin, pencil line, existing floor, etc) . With the 2 taps open wait for the water to settle then mark the stick. From then on raise or lower the stick until the water is lined up with the pencil mark and the other end of the stick is your datum, even around corners away from the reservoir.

    One caution, don’t spill any water as this will alter the setting and you will have to re-calibrate the stick.
    Another caution, be careful outside on windy days as the wind blowing over the top causes a vacuum effect and will give incorrect readings.
    Don't force it, use a bigger hammer.

    Timber is what you use. Wood is what you burn.

  2. #2
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    Default

    there are many variations on the water level and all are deadly accurate if used properly - well, what more level could you get than still water?

    I generally use just a single hose and operate fom one reference line marking secondary lines at that same level. With this method it doesn't matter if you spill any water because you just lift the tube so that the new level lines up with your reference point and carry on duplicating that level.

    When I built my present shed (I use water levels for all building), I marked my level and my niegbour (A tradesman!) kindly came around with his dumpy level to check/correct my levels: so I let him waste a while.

    Denn

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by dennford View Post

    I generally use just a single hose and operate fom one reference line marking secondary lines at that same level. With this method it doesn't matter if you spill any water because you just lift the tube so that the new level lines up with your reference point and carry on duplicating that level.
    You need two people to do that though.

    You don't need a reservoir. You can just duct tape one end of the tube to your datum (or just nail it through the top of the tube above the water level), adjust the level until it's right (perhaps with an offset to your datum), then stick a bit of duct tape to your reading end to signify the level. Hold your finger over the end as you move around to ensure that you don't loose any water, and adjust the height to correspond with the duct tape on the tube. You can do it single handed, and you don't need to have a line of site to the datum. Of course you can tape it to a stick as well if your checking a ceiling or a floor somewhere away from the walls. Basically the same as suggested in the first post.

    Or as mentioned, you can just stick one end in a bucket of water, under a brick, then you don't need duct tape. Just make sure that you've got roughly the same amount of empty tube above the water each time you make a new mark. And of course make sure that there's no air in the tube, especially where it comes up over the lip of the bucket. It's splitting hairs, but you should always make your marks at the meniscus which will be noticeably concave on a narrow tube.

    If you want a simple old masons' level, Just get a piece of straight 100x12x1200, rule a line down the centre, cut a hole near one end, drive a nail in the centre at the top, tie a string to it and tie a rock so it hangs where the hole is. Line up the string with the pencil mark and you've got a plumb level. For a horizontal level, use 3,4,5 to nail a cross member to the bottom. A bit stone aged, but certainly very accurate if you build it right.
    I saw a good illustration of this on the website of a member here who calls himself billbeee: mason's level. Interesting little story underneath that as well.


  4. #4
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    Default

    I'll have a look after dinner.

    Denn

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by pawnhead View Post
    You don't need a reservoir. You can just duct tape one end of the tube to your datum (or just nail it through the top of the tube above the water level), adjust the level until it's right (perhaps with an offset to your datum), then stick a bit of duct tape to your reading end to signify the level. Hold your finger over the end as you move around to ensure that you don't loose any water, and adjust the height to correspond with the duct tape on the tube. You can do it single handed, and you don't need to have a line of site to the datum.
    I used this method today to put the guttering up on my shed. 15yo son gave me a hand to do the job and once I showed him how to use a water level, he was as keen as mustard cos he then had "a job"
    __________________________________________
    A closed mouth gathers no feet. Anon 2009

  6. #6
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    When you move to a new target location, re-check the water level at the datum. Theoretically, the hose volume between locations should stay constant. 'Taint so, because of flexibility of the hose. BTDT.

    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by joe greiner View Post
    When you move to a new target location, re-check the water level at the datum. Theoretically, the hose volume between locations should stay constant. 'Taint so, because of flexibility of the hose. BTDT.

    Joe
    Yeh, I'd always close by re-checking the datum, then double checking all the marks. A bit like the old 'measure twice, cut once' adage.


  8. #8
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    Thanks for the plug John.

    rat52, as soon as I read your opening paragraph I was reminded of a typical case of technological overkill. (how's that ? nearly as good as plethora).

    We were forming and pouring about 4M high, tapered concrete blast walls in an electrical switch yard years ago. When we had the formwork for the first one set up, (with a plumb bob) the young engineer comes out and sets up his theodolite.

    He took a couple of readings, we nudged the top over 3mm for him, he mumbled a bit, then made us push it back 3mm. Same at the other end. Then said we were OK to pour.

    After that we always left them 10mm or so out, so that he felt he was doing his job.

    Some things are constants: Water is always level, a suspended weight is always vertical, a 3,4,5 triangle always creates a rightangle. Why make things more complicated than than they need to be?

    Cheers
    Bill

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by billbeee View Post
    Thanks for the plug John.


    Some things are constants: Water is always level, a suspended weight is always vertical, a 3,4,5 triangle always creates a rightangle. Why make things more complicated than than they need to be?

    Cheers
    Bill

    Exactly, a laser level can project a straight line but if not set level then every point on that line is a different hieght - yet I never heard of sloping water.

    Denn

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by dennford View Post
    .. yet I never heard of sloping water.

    Denn
    Oh oh, here we go into the old "the world must be flat argument"

    I agree with the points made, and will add that if you are aware of the basic principles, and keep to them, a laser still has its place. Especially for speed and sometimes in awkward areas.

    As an aside, what happens with the water level when it is setup in the morning, then the full sun hits it?

  11. #11
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    That's another point against a dumpy. A water level is obviously superior since it compensates for the Earths' curvature across your building site. I read somewhere that that it actually comes into play with some reeeeeeeeeeally long buildings.
    Quote Originally Posted by dennford View Post
    I never heard of sloping water.
    I think that Irish water skier is still searching for some.


  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Groggy View Post
    Oh oh, here we go into the old "the world must be flat argument"

    a laser still has its place. As an aside, what happens with the water level when it is setup in the morning, then the full sun hits it?

    Yes a laser certainly does have its place in fact I believe that it is one of the most effective new age tools available - don't get me wrong when I tout the advantages of old methods I still embrace and appreciate the benefits of modern technology. However wether it is space age or stone age technology if we don't use it correctly then it will do us wrong.

    Oh! and as for the expanding water in you next point. I thought that it was agreed that when using the water level as with any measuring tool we are continually rechecking our reference point - so expanding water is treated exactly the same as if we had spilled some water from the tube.

    It's all a bit like navigation; everyone should be able to use a g.p.s. but I really respect and believe that a navigator tht can use a sextant,clock and compass is a much more accomplished person.

    Denn

  13. #13
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    I like water-levels when I want two widely seperated datum points or am "walking the wall." (ie checking that an existing structure is level by walking along it with one end of the level.) They're cheap, quick'n'easy to set up, don't need batteries and you can throw 'em off a scaffold or run over 'em with a wheelbarrow without worrying about damage.

    They'll also work in places where a laser can't be set up... if your datum points are on both sides of a wall, for example. They can be awkward to use in a one-man operation though.


    Now the laser, on the other hand, will provide a straight-line reference between your datum points, doing away with the need for a straightedge, and is ideal for non-level applications. You want a 2" fall over such'n'such width? Simply adjust the laser until you get the fall. No mucking around with two marks on the level and then marking up (or down) 2" on one of them. I heartily recommend their use when screeding a floor. Takes a while to get it set up just right, but once it is you can see any highpoints.

    They can be aright PITA to set up though, are useless in applications where you can't find a position with line of site to where the datum points need to be, don't take kindly to hard knocks and aren't the sort of thing I'd leave lying around in plain sight in the back of the ute or on any of the construction sites I've worked.


    So:
    • Both methods have their advantages.
    • Both have their disadvantages.
    • Both have their place in my toolbox.
    I may be weird, but I'm saving up to become eccentric.

    - Andy Mc

  14. #14
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    Question.......
    Are two freely suspended plumb bobs truely parallel?
    Jim
    Sometimes in the daily challenges that life gives us, we miss what is really important...

  15. #15
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    Is that a trick question? If so, then the answer is no, but the closer they get to each other, the closer they are to being parallel. They point exactly towards the centre of mass of the Earth.

    Massive plumb bobs are used to align skyscrapers during construction.
    The CN Tower, located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, is the world's tallest freestanding structure on land, standing 553.33 meters
    Through the pour, the vertical accuracy of the tower was maintained by comparing the slip form's location to massive plumb bobs hanging from it, observed by small telescopes from the ground.
    http://www.answers.com/topic/cn-tower
    That article will soon need correction.

    edit:
    2007.sept.03 Burj Dubai is on the way to become the world's tallest freestanding structure. At 545.7 m (148 levels), it is just 7 m shorter than the CN Tower in Toronto.
    http://www.burjdubaiskyscraper.com/index.html
    It's probably passed it by now since it's going up at about a floor a day.
    That's a bit of a milestone.


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