I use green pin at both 0, 20, 40 and so on, that's because these numbers are dividable by 4 and I end up in the same position. Yes you might need 4 different colours to cover all even numbers. If I use same example but instead of starting with 6-14-8 started with 6-12-10 I would need 4 colours (0, 2.75, 2 and 0.75). Just an example. Hope you are saitisfied with your jig🙂
On the variable sized pins that increment along the width why do you get to use a same colored pin ( green pin} ? You use 4 pins but 2 of the same color. Is there a situation where you need the 4 separate colors? As an aside I purchased the plans and have a working jig.
I use green pin at both 0, 20, 40 and so on, that's because these numbers are dividable by 4 and I end up in the same position. Yes you might need 4 different colours to cover all even numbers. If I use same example but instead of starting with 6-14-8 started with 6-12-10 I would need 4 colours (0, 2.75, 2 and 0.75). Just an example. Hope you are saitisfied with your jig🙂
On the variable sized pins that increment along the width why do you get to use a same colored pin ( green pin} ? You use 4 pins but 2 of the same color. Is there a situation where you need the 4 separate colors? As an aside I purchased the plans and have a working jig.
I see that my answer ended up as a seperate comment so you might have missed it. See comment above yours.