danny
Silver $$ Contributor
I don't pay for Prime, and I have been able to return everything. Am I missing something?I'd buy them from not-amazon.
If you do - make sure it's with Prime - so you can return no questions asked.
Danny
I don't pay for Prime, and I have been able to return everything. Am I missing something?I'd buy them from not-amazon.
If you do - make sure it's with Prime - so you can return no questions asked.
I think that says more about who you have outsourced that work to.I work in an ISO manufacturing environment and we have to get our mics, calipers, depth mics, etc calibrated and certified yearly. They will not certify or calibrate digital mics or calipers...if that gives you any indication of their quality or accuracy....
As do I. Our digital calipers are calibrated annually without fuss. I suspect your company has a reason, but ISO 9001 compliance is not the driving reason.I work in an ISO manufacturing environment and we have to get our mics, calipers, depth mics, etc calibrated and certified yearly. They will not certify or calibrate digital mics or calipers...if that gives you any indication of their quality or accuracy....
Yep, calipers are kind of the tape measures of the measuring instrument world. You can get pretty good with them, but...I think that says more about who you have outsourced that work to.
That said, calipers are not a super accurate tool. Sorry. Get a calibrated steel block of a couple sizes. Much cheaper than high end calipers.
I use the I Gaging/ OriginCal and say plus one. Repeatable and/ also PRS is sloppy shooting anyways.For my reloading purposes I gaging calipers were recommended by a couple of friends, they work quite well.
im currently using the hornady digital calipers. im curious is it worth it to upgrade to a higher end set or are these fine. and if so what set do you recommend? thanks in advance
usually the cheaper digital stuff works as long as it works but they just dont last as long as some higher priced/quality models. at least thats been my experience. Id use what you have and get some kind of test standard to check them often. you will then find out when the pair you have takes a dump and its time to buy new ones. should do that with my starrets and mitutoyos to. i usually check several pairs against each other and against mic readings to. mabie im a little anal.im currently using the hornady digital calipers. im curious is it worth it to upgrade to a higher end set or are these fine. and if so what set do you recommend? thanks in advance
Except all the cheap calipers I’ve had fell apart, eat batteries and/or got sticky, the mitutoyo’s run n run n run without issues.Whether the digital calipers are 200.00 or 29.00, likely +,- 0.001. For reloading +,- 0.001 is all you need. Repeatable measurements are often the user not the tool. Company I worked for was ISO(certification of documentation of procedures and practices) tools and calibration equipment went to NIST for testing and certification. These calipers passed several times and than "retired". They still function fine for reloading.View attachment 1618117
what kinda test standard do you mean to check them?usually the cheaper digital stuff works as long as it works but they just dont last as long as some higher priced/quality models. at least thats been my experience. Id use what you have and get some kind of test standard to check them often. you will then find out when the pair you have takes a dump and its time to buy new ones. should do that with my starrets and mitutoyos to. i usually check several pairs against each other and against mic readings to. mabie im a little anal.
just something you know the size of - you can buy standards that are like a dowel pin that have an accurate (.001 or better). dimension you can measure with a caliper and see how close they are reading. you could use a gage pin or alot of things.what kinda test standard do you mean to check them?
i havent dropped a caliper yet but i sure have dropped quite a few indicators.Cheap New Caliper came in Saturday to replace one that I dropped.
Initial tests look OK (with thumbwheel).
The video portion was blind, held caliper in front of camera.
that sounds good. i have a few pairs of the US made starrets - one pair i bought when i was 18 ( 50 years) my 1st set of calipers—- except for having a tendency to jump the track those things are still as accurate as my digital mitutoyos that are a couple years old.I had it open for CBTO with the Hornady fitting sitting on the edge of of a table and it fell to a hard tile floor.
Seems it dinged the gear train inside. I have a really old Starrett set than has some wear but works.
This new one really seems to be slick and spot on.
I'll bring the Jo Blocks down stairs and check at longer measurements.
Just pics, no youtube![]()
I've been using these iGaging digital calipers for several years, including the USB wireless connection to my computer. Really speeds up data collection and reduces transcription errors. If that is something you need. I have several sets of iGaging digital calipers and some digital indicators as well. They've all held up and functioned quite nicely, except when I drop them, but that has happend to the Mits as well.I think they can be connected to a laptop, although I’ve not done so.
My opinion; if the one you have is basically functioning and measuring correctly, you won't gain anything by upgrading, at least for reloading.im currently using the hornady digital calipers. im curious is it worth it to upgrade to a higher end set or are these fine. and if so what set do you recommend? thanks in advance