"The longest-lived micrometer than can be bought." J.T. Slocomb micrometers and stand, all fully restored by myself. Each mic is between 70-120 years old, and they're all still accurate.
Submitted by ExHempKnight t3_115h0nr in BuyItForLife
Original calibration gauges below as well? Those are very pretty tools
Thank you! I need to bring the standards to an instrument calibration place, and have them checked. I'm sure they're fine for my little hobby shop, but I'm kinda particular about that stuff.
Metrology is cool
It really is. Since I've started this journey of precision work, I've really gained an appreciation for how important the tiniest of distances really are. And that everything is rubber.
What do you mean by “everything is rubber”?
Everything is flexible, to some degree. Drop a feather onto a pool table, and the weight of that feather will bend the slate of the pool table. It's a tiny, tiny, TINY amount, but given appropriately sensitive equipment, you will find that there's a deflection.
When you're measuring down to 3, 4, or especially 5 decimal places, even the heat of your breath can distort a part a measureable amount.
Robin Renzetti has a great demonstration of this, if you're curious. Skip to 31:00 for the relevant part.
For those who watch the video: If you skip to 31:00, you need to watch to 35:49, to see why he's doing this testing on his carpet? :)
Adam Savage has some interesting discussions about his journey towards precision. Pask has a similar kind of arc as well on his channel. The hallmark of craftsmen is that their tastes become more and more exacting over time. The tools needed to accomplish that become more and more specialized and beautiful too.
I've enjoyed Adam Savage's journey. Wild to see someone I admire so much, have the same kinds of struggles and learning experiences that I have.
I’m sure they will be fine. We calibrate our sensitive torque wrenches all the time and they hardly ever need adjustment.
I'm sure they will, as well. But as old as they are, I'm sure they're a bit worn. I don't need them to be exact, I mostly need to know exactly how off they are, so I can compensate when I calibrate the mics.
I mean... That's a completely different kind of tool I don't know why you think that's applicable.
These kinds of standards can corrode and change or need to be re-lapped, or just wear. That doesn't ruin them, but you need to know how long they actually are so you can zero the micrometer correctly.
Nah they’re right. I calibrate the color on my computer’s LCD display at home every few months and typically don’t need to change much
Nah that can't be right, because I have to reset the clock on my microwave every month
That’s just the power company being shit
It almost certainly has its own internal clock rather than using the mains frequency, but that's beside the point
I was making a joke about the power going out and needing to reset it bc I find myself having to do that at a frequency that’s probably more consistent than that of the power itself
Ah oh right, yeah that's annoying too
With all that work you put in, why the fuck not!
I have inherited a box of machinist tools... I'm not sure what they're good for, but they seem all new. They're starett
Bring the gauges as well, they also need to be checked
Nah, once the standards are known, I can calibrate the mics myself. I'm not looking for NIST traceability.
Depending on usage, you might need to get them tested for flatness and linearity. Parallelism for a 0 to 1 inch mic as well
I'd love to have them all lapped, but that's beyond any equipment I have, and prohibitively expensive to have done.
There aren't a lot of places that can do it, anyway.
I think you misunderstood me. You mentioned that you could use the end standards to calibrate the mics. All that does is set the zero on the mic itself. Calibrating a mic consists of checking for linearity, flatness, and parallelism. Like you mentioned, it won't matter for your use.
Fair points. If I understand correctly, the measuring faces are checked using a set of optical flats, each a slightly different length, to check for parallelism at different rotational positions of the spindle, right?
As a quality tech who calibrates micrometers often, if you have any that seem to not center very well ( you get a measurement but a little more force changes it by a tenth or so) you more than likely have a burr or foreign material on edge of the faces and a really smooth stone should be able to take it off, this is what I think I used for a v mic that had rust on the carbide faces and it checks gauge pins to tenths still.
I got to see a huge metrology operation last week. Over 150 calibration and repair technicians. Was very very cool.
Metrology is a very cool job. Tons of demand.
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