I've had a digital Mitutoyo for about 30 years. It averages four years between battery changes, but I store it in a heated house.
Mike
Digital Calipers
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Re: Digital Calipers
Question
I have 50 year old Scherr Tumico 6" calipers. What advantage does a digital caliper offer? For example, is a Harbour Freight digital 6" ($20) as accurate, more accurate?
I have 50 year old Scherr Tumico 6" calipers. What advantage does a digital caliper offer? For example, is a Harbour Freight digital 6" ($20) as accurate, more accurate?
- dusty
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 21530
- Joined: Wed Nov 22, 2006 6:52 am
- Location: Tucson (Wildcat Country), Arizona
Re: Digital Calipers
Accuracy of a fifty year old precision device may be a function of how well it was cared for. If I am not mistaken, the Scherr Tumico Vernier Caliper was made in Germany. In that era, German made tools were extreme high quality items. I would bet that it is as accurate as any that we have been discussing here on the forum.
"Making Sawdust Safely"
Dusty
Sent from my Dell XPS using Firefox.
Dusty
Sent from my Dell XPS using Firefox.
Re: Digital Calipers
The advantage in my shop is - I don't have to use a magnifying glass to read the vernier scale. My old caliper is a standby just in case the battery fails and I don't have a spare.db5 wrote:Question
I have 50 year old Scherr Tumico 6" calipers. What advantage does a digital caliper offer? For example, is a Harbour Freight digital 6" ($20) as accurate, more accurate?
Both have the same accuracy!
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Re: Digital Calipers
Db5, my older brother (Skouson here) got a BUNCH of the 6 inch HF model ($10 or so)db5 wrote:Question
I have 50 year old Scherr Tumico 6" calipers. What advantage does a digital caliper offer? For example, is a Harbour Freight digital 6" ($20) as accurate, more accurate?
for Christmas presents, to all his male siblings. So far, mine is working just fine.
He also included a slip of paper in each one;
When you need to know, EXACTLY by how much, you've failed to meet expectations.
(He should have sent me the 12 inch model!)
steve
10 ER, stripped down.
Basic 10ER, Parts machine. Will be a semi-dedicated drill-press machine.
10 ER, a "survivor" of the trailer fire, in the back yard, needing restoration. Has a Mk5 headrest. Finally, stripped down.
Numerous parts, for Model 10 stuff. Except for lower saw guard, A and B adapters, I've got it.
Looking for one more, or some 9 inch extension table raisers.
Basic 10ER, Parts machine. Will be a semi-dedicated drill-press machine.
10 ER, a "survivor" of the trailer fire, in the back yard, needing restoration. Has a Mk5 headrest. Finally, stripped down.
Numerous parts, for Model 10 stuff. Except for lower saw guard, A and B adapters, I've got it.
Looking for one more, or some 9 inch extension table raisers.
- BuckeyeDennis
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 3812
- Joined: Tue Jul 24, 2012 10:03 pm
- Location: Central Ohio
Re: Digital Calipers
I have Mitutoyo digital calipers at work, and Mitutoyo dial calipers at home. My dial calipers are accurate to 0.001". I assume that the digital one is also, being professionally calibrated, but I don't use it for anything that fussy, and have never checked it myself.
Here's my opinion of dial vs. digital. At work, I like the digital, for no other reason than I can switch the readout between Imperial and metric. The stuff I measure there is a mixed bag. In my woodshop, I rarely measure metric stuff, and prefer the dial calipers. The reason is that I can directly see small relative displacements, without having to do mental subtraction, or futz around with zeroing a digital caliper to measure relative distance.
Years back, a lot of car companies started putting digital speedometers in their new cars, because they could, and thought it was cool. But most people prefer analog speedometers. I can't remember the last time I saw a digital one in a new car. Unless you count "analog" gauges that are really just graphics on a digital display.
Here's my opinion of dial vs. digital. At work, I like the digital, for no other reason than I can switch the readout between Imperial and metric. The stuff I measure there is a mixed bag. In my woodshop, I rarely measure metric stuff, and prefer the dial calipers. The reason is that I can directly see small relative displacements, without having to do mental subtraction, or futz around with zeroing a digital caliper to measure relative distance.
Years back, a lot of car companies started putting digital speedometers in their new cars, because they could, and thought it was cool. But most people prefer analog speedometers. I can't remember the last time I saw a digital one in a new car. Unless you count "analog" gauges that are really just graphics on a digital display.
Re: Digital Calipers
Helena winters aren't much warmer.putttn wrote:I like mine too but batteries don't last very long. I have to keep them in our house in the winter because the garage shop is cold in Spokane until I crank up the heaters.
What I did was buy a package of 10 CR2032 batteries for about $8. They are in a wood working bench drawer. The gauges may deplete power quickly, but never used stored in cold weather has not seemed to affect the new batteries. I opened one after two years (winters) and it worked fine.
Just a thought.
Be well,
Ben
Re: Digital Calipers
We used to put dry cells in the fridge to extend longevity. Worked good!!
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Chuck in Lancaster, CA