Comment by bena
10 hours ago
This is actually a tool used in construction. A chamber filled with chalk and a coiled line. You hook the line to one end of your item, pull the chamber across, make it tight, snap the line.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Milwaukee-100-ft-Bold-Line-Chalk...
The Tajima ones [0] are phenomenal, though the hook leaves a longer blank stretch than I'd like. They make a super nice snap knife too. Highly recommend Tajima for anything they make. Annoyingly, they don't sell a rip saw, only crosscut.
[0] https://www.tajimatool.com/product_category/mt/#chalk-rite
Using one of these to snap a perfect reference line is extremely satisfying.
"Perfect" is doing some heavy lifting here. The string is always a non-straight catenary curve, unless infinite force is used to pull an indestructable string.
A laser beam* across the room will show the defect in the string straightness. It's more than good enough to fool human eyes, which are not good at judging slow gradients (such as all the touristy "mystical anti-gravity locations" where balls roll apparently uphill). Therefore, the snap-line is good enough. But not perfect.
* Gravity of course still affects the laser beam's straightness, but on a level good enough to fool electron microscopes, so we can give that a pass.