After watching the previous video, I remembered you could do this... but completely forgotten how to do it. Shoo... these days I use a metal ruler when cutting things with a scalpel... yeah, the plastic or wooden rulers always ended up being wobbly. (Do they still sell wooden rulers?)
@@pierdolio i've never used one but it does look a little unconfortable. it's not lame tho. It looks like a designer dream gadget made by a mad scientist
wow!! this brought back memories! ITS A KITE!
i came here because of google so it means that google recommended your video to us!
thanks Google
I have a maths exam tomorrow- so good timing! 😂
Where did you get that compass
i had forgotten that you could do this.
Thank you!
Thank you Thank you Thank You so much
You are very welcome
I want you to do square root of 2 using these tools.
what kind of compass is that?
Rotring
After watching the previous video, I remembered you could do this... but completely forgotten how to do it.
Shoo... these days I use a metal ruler when cutting things with a scalpel... yeah, the plastic or wooden rulers always ended up being wobbly. (Do they still sell wooden rulers?)
I was given on recently - but it had a metal edge insert. Plastic and wood seem to guide the scalpel blade straight to the fingers! 😫
Shoo Rayner Ah yes, I remember the wooden rulers with a metal insert. Great for cutting and technical pencils.
That compass looks so “lame”. Why don’t you use a traditional compass?
Lame = awkward
that's an universal compass
@@igordemelo4128 does "universal" somehow negate "awkward"?
@@pierdolio i've never used one but it does look a little unconfortable. it's not lame tho. It looks like a designer dream gadget made by a mad scientist
I forgot to mention that i think it's probably not produced in large scale, as It seems rough obviously. . . But it is so cool
Simple - you can't put a sharpie pen or a paintbrush in a traditional compass.