"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
Reply to comment by ExHempKnight in "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. by ExHempKnight
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
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