Westbury® Hardware Mounting Template

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Details on the setting for the bottom adjustment piece would helpful.

mwrench
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Lord forbid if you had a zoom option on your camera

woodyw
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Does it stay there on its own when you let go? How is it holding onto the post? Does it hold the bracket in place when it’s put in there or do I need to clamp the template and the bracket before I even start screwing? Can you adjust the height or width of this to accommodate the different post heights or widths? Can you adjust the height of the bottom bracket hole location at all or does it only sit on the deck and you only get the one option for bottom rail height? If so, Will it work with stair railing brackets at all? Does it still work with stair brackets when the tread of a step is 12”? It this made of plastic or metal or composite? What’s the warranty? There are Sooo many questions left unanswered in this video, very disappointed. I’m not sure why or what this video what intended to do if you don’t even actually go into detail of what it’s capable of. Just saying, if you expect actual contractors and carpenters to buy this without extensive knowledge of how this is going to make their day go faster rather than using the cardboard cutout then you need to tell us why we need it... I mean the title of the tool sounds like it COULD be helpful if it was capable of everything I was mentioning in my questions and then some, but the descriptions online and this video don’t say much about it. I doubt the average homeowner is buying these tools, I’d feel safe in assuming someone who builds decks for a living or a large remodeling company would be this tools market. I’m not sure who’s in charge of advertising but it seems they could use a better understanding on not only how much blue collar workers value their money earned from blood and sweat, but also that showing a 30 second video of the product without an actual demonstration or any level of detail about the tool is bound to deter us from investing in this tool. Most of us younger, higher quality, smarter carpenters these days prefer and value higher quality, smarter tools with high quality materials and attention to detail. I will always happily pay even $100’s more for a tool that will last me a lifetime over a cheaper grade material, disposable tool that will maybe last a season, and just barely get me by with mediocre results. That doesn’t give any pride to manufacturers and doesn’t make consumers or customers happy. EVER. No one ever talks about cheap tools.

burrr