Can some kind person explain why a hobby workshop needs a surface plate?
My understanding is they are mainly used for precision metrology – inspection of parts to ensure they are within manufacturing tolerances, gauge making and other tool-room work requiring 10x more accuracy than needed for production – like jigs and fixtures. In modern use, surface plates are often part of a Coordinate Measuring Machine, which are completely over the top! For high precision work surface plates have to be calibrated regularly.
Surface plates are also used for marking out but this is a technique little used in my amateur workshop. Exceptionally I might use a glass sheet and a height gauge, but the latter is much less useful than expected. Instead my milling table and bench-top are 'good enough' as flat surfaces and – most of the time – a DRO fitted milling machine supported by micrometer, digital caliper and DTI replaces marking out. So I don't use lots of marking blue, scribe lines, and centre pops: rather, I establish a reference point on the job and work from that, creating new reference points as necessary to check and maintain accuracy.
It's not just surface plates I've rejected! I don't use buttons or other high-precision tool-room methods either.
Perhaps it's me – I rarely need measured accuracy better than 0.02mm (about 1 thou). Close fits are achieved by using one part as a gauge and shaving the other down to match as tightly or loosely as necessary. Others may need better, but for what? What am I missing that makes it worth owning a surface plate?
Dave