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Your cart is empty.Out with the OLD and in with the NEW! Komelon is taking the traditional chrome tape measure and bringing it to the next level. Each tape features an ergonomically designed chrome case, slide lock, and vibrant hi-visibility nylon coated blade. It's time for a bright new tape measure with Komelon's Hi-Viz Professional! You'll see and feel the quality.
Todd and Wendy
Reviewed in the United States on March 5, 2025
Awesome Product!
Busa
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2025
I work construction, so for me to have an engineer tape. It's very helpful.Because when you're doing streets in new developments, your dirt subgrade is in 10ths, and ABC subgrade is in inches
Jose
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2025
Muy bien
Dengle88
Reviewed in the United States on February 25, 2025
Working great so far
juan guerrero
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2025
Good product
stephane
Reviewed in Belgium on June 5, 2024
surtout acheté pour son look vert et pas decu, beau ruban de qualité
safyan jazzar
Reviewed in Saudi Arabia on June 14, 2024
جيد
Cochiloko
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2024
Great tape meassure no issues. Delivered on time.
Reggie C
Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2024
This tape measure surprised me because of the low cost and thought the quality would be subpar. That is not the fact at all, this is a great tape measure. You won't be disappointed.
William Blouin
Reviewed in Canada on July 1, 2023
franchement WoW !! impossible de faire mieux a un prix si bas pour 14,87$ j'ai un tape a mesure que j'estimerais a 75$ il as tout pour être le meuilleur des tapes qui existe. on y voit les pouces et les pied et toutes les graduations que vous pouvez vous imaginer . En plus du systême de vérouillage qui est fiable a 100%. franchement acheter-le, ça en vaut vraiment la peine. maintenant que j'en suis au courant je vais le recommander a toute ma famille et a mes proches car il en vaut vraiment la peine. dès la premiere seconde que je l'ai utiliser j'ai toute suite penser a faire un feedback.
PA
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2021
Have had this about a month or soPros:+Great standout+ Strong belt clip+ The matte hi-vis color actually helps with readability, as opposed to yellow or white+ 33' Tape plays out very smoothly+ Measurements in both Imperial (inches, fractional feet) AND *Engineers/Surveyors (tenths, decimal feet)Neutral Quibbles/ It's shiny and, so, is occasionally blinding. Avert your gaze accordingly./ It's heavy(ish). I'm accustomed to 25' tapes and this is noticeably heavier. I upgraded because I never got the full 25' with other tapes; a little more weight is not a problem/ The lock is the standard slide type. I had grown rather fond of pushing a button to retract the auto-locked tapeCons:-This sucker is slippery. Outer shell is polished "chrome" plastic with no rubber grips or bumpers-The plastic case nicks easily, but hell, maybe that'll make it more grippy...?-retraction is slow. I've found that holding the case with the tape slot face-down helps to speed it up a little.*Soapbox: Us Americans seem reluctant to give up measuring with Inch and Foot increments and to adopt the Metric system. To most, myself included, anything... meter-y is a mystery and vaguely unpatriotic. Where Metric math is very straightforward, the Meter (approximately one pace), visualized, is ironically unwieldy; it's hard to visualize. A foot, on the other hand, is an intuitive unit of measurement. Every grown adult knows about how big a foot is. Need to roughly measure a distance? Heel-Toe is often good enough. Yet doing anything involving the fractions of a foot can stymie just about anyone (excepting seasoned Carpenters and old Surveyors). What the hell is a 1/16th? How many are in 5/8's? What is the total of the two?What if Metric's easy calculability could use the human-scale Imperial foot as it's defining primary measurement unit?Enter the Decimal Foot or Engineers Scale. It uses the same foot-length but the foot is divided into ten segments or Tenths. Each tenth is divided by ten to create Hundredths and a hundredth is divided by ten to form Thousands. The math becomes extremely simple, yet still accurateHere's an example: 5 3/4" or 0.48+ 8 1/2" =? + 0.71 =?The answer is the same:(14 1/4" or 1' 2 1/4" or 1.19')I'll bet you were better able to solve the second one in your head and there in lies the beauty. It requires only basic math skills without converting or reducing fractions and decreases the likelihood of error. How many hundredths are in 1.19 feet? 119. How many 1/8ths are in 1 foot 2 1/4 inches? I'll have to get back to you on that one... 🤔
Sean M
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 11, 2020
Arrived very quickly and is a solid tape.Use this when working offshore and it is perfect for me
Customer
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 21, 2019
If you work in the drilling industry you'll know it's one of the last bastions of the Imperial measurement system..... And you'll know that everything is measured in decimal feet! Weird eh!Now measuring in feet and inches and fractions of inches isn't hard. Nor is converting those measurements to decimal difficult. It does however add time and another opportunity for error into the mix.This removes that risk and speeds up the process.Decent quality, decent price.Good buy.
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