mklotz
Well-Known Member
A friend was complaining to me that he bored a hole oversized a few thou.
Q: With what were you measuring the hole diameter?
A: Dial calipers.
Gag! You can't measure hole diameters accurately with calipers.
Take a look at the inside jaws on your calipers. You'll see a tiny* flat. When you use them to measure a hole, what you're measuring is the distance between two tiny chords on the circle formed by the hole. Thus the hole will always measure undersize - the worst possible error direction if you're enlarging the hole.
For *precision* applications, always use an inside mike, expanding gages or bore or pin gages to measure. Never use calipers.
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* I measured the 0.2" standard for my 1.2-2.2" inside mike with my Mitutoyo calipers. It measured 0.1975". With a little trig, that makes the flats about 0.030" wide which, to my calibrated eyeball, looks about right.
Q: With what were you measuring the hole diameter?
A: Dial calipers.
Gag! You can't measure hole diameters accurately with calipers.
Take a look at the inside jaws on your calipers. You'll see a tiny* flat. When you use them to measure a hole, what you're measuring is the distance between two tiny chords on the circle formed by the hole. Thus the hole will always measure undersize - the worst possible error direction if you're enlarging the hole.
For *precision* applications, always use an inside mike, expanding gages or bore or pin gages to measure. Never use calipers.
--------------------------------
* I measured the 0.2" standard for my 1.2-2.2" inside mike with my Mitutoyo calipers. It measured 0.1975". With a little trig, that makes the flats about 0.030" wide which, to my calibrated eyeball, looks about right.