Sydney wrote:I highly recommend this:
And also this:
http://www.amazon.com/Engineering-Formu ... 0071457747
This book is very handy for all those calculus volume and area formulas that I forgot about sometimes in the last decade or so. There are sections on formulas for Electrical Engineering, Heat, Statistics, and a lot more.
As was pointed out, a 3 degree angle, in 10 inches of run, will produce just over about 0.5 inches of rise. For any woodworking that involves PL, that's more than close enough. (To ten-thousandths of an inch, the amount of rise in 10 inches of run is 0.5241. The 24 thousands worth of rounding error is more accuracy than any of these designs need.)
A 4 degree angle, in 10 inches of run, will produce just over about 0.7 inches of rise. For any woodworking that involves PL, that's more than close enough. In this case 3/4" of an inch is probably not close enough. (Again, to ten-thousandths of an inch, the amount of rise in 10 inches of run is 0.6992.)
--Stan Graves