Sujet : Re: Gauge blocks
De : none (at) *nospam* none.com99 (Bob La Londe)
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworkingDate : 27. Jun 2024, 22:56:16
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v5kn60$2u7cp$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 6/27/2024 12:35 PM, Snag wrote:
Am I really going to need to allow for millionths of an inch ? I'm looking at an 81 piece set from Shars , a grade B with the deviation table for under a hundred bucks . Looks like the biggest variance is .000034" , or about a third of a ten thousandth . I can't see any project that I might get needing that kind of precision ...
I'm considering buying the set just because I've kinda wanted some and I think they'll get me closer to perfect in my upcoming depth mike project . Since they can trace back to a national standard I can also use them to check all my other micrometers , none of which have been calibrated for at least 40 years , and in some cases longer than that .
You will probably be fine. I hardly even use my gage blocks. I just CNC machine an angle plate with a stop. I have a cheap B grade set, and I miced them (I have Starret standards), and they are as good as I can measure except the 4 inch which for some reason is almost exactly 4.001
I have a set of gage pins too. Most of the time I just use my set of drill blanks because its faster and most holes I'm checking are nominal standard sizes anyway. If they aren't I measure them with an inside mic.
-- Bob La LondeCNC Molds N Stuff-- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG antivirus software.www.avg.com