kaiser":kfz9h7tt said:
Woohoo I am the master.
Combination of utahdogs and monsterfats posts seen me through. Well its laced anyway
Here's a general tip-list for tensioning the wheel...obviously I'm 3000 miles away from you so there is a grain of salt factor here!

If your spokes are good stuff like DTs, Wheelsmiths, or Sapims, the threads will be cut by machine and they will be pretty much the same depth, so you can use the threads as an initial guage. If a local shop, or you personally, had to cut and thread the spokes, then you will have to tension by feel and that is a trick in itself. If they are factory cut, tighten the spokes such that the same amount of thread is visible from the nipple on the first go round (say three or four threads), then half turns of the spoke wrench for two go rounds, check the dish. Then 1/4 turns for the remaining go rounds until your in the ballpark tension-wise. Check the dish. At this point I like to 'set' the spokes at the outer cross by putting a spoke spoon (or a screw driver) in the cross and pressing from the rim toward the hub, pushing the cross toward the hub. Check the dish one more time, and check for round. You are there, true the wheel as you normally would. If at any point in the process you have a wheel that is more than an inch or so out of true or a quarter inch out of round, you have a spoke somewhere that is too loose or too tight, or you missed a cross (common mistake). Rear wheels seem to tension up with the dish being a bit off, but the front should dish evenly naturally. The rear can be brought into line in your final steps in the build.
If its a Mavic rim, it will be round. If its a Velocity rim it will be square. If it is a Campy rim it should be on the wall!
Good job on the lace-up, that is always the most daunting task for a first time build. People seem to take a deep dreath once it looks like a wheel! I always thought Sheldon Brown and Jobst Brandt and others over complicate the process. Not to say they are wrong, because they aren't, but it's not the rocket science it's portrayed to be.