FiendFX
Well-known member
Can someone recommend me one? Im thinking of getting the one from harbor freight since its only like $10. Are they accurate? This is for brake job.
Can someone recommend me one? Im thinking of getting the one from harbor freight since its only like $10. Are they accurate? This is for brake job.
I'll send you a pair of dial mitutoyo's that failed calibration for one reason or another (generally .001'' wear on the ID tips) for the price of postage.
For something like checking brakes it should be fine. I wouldn't leave the battery in it, though. Seems to use it up even when turned off.
Bull - I'll send you a set too if you need them and will use them.
And actually, as I write this, I question whether I know the difference between the job a micrometer does and that a dial caliper does...![]()
Bull - A nice set of calipers in well trained hands is good for maybe +/- .001'' accuracy (maybe less at the extremes). A nice micrometer will measure in the .0001'' range. You use a micrometer for precision measurements.
A caliper is much more versatile because of the shape, the ID measurements and the depth measurements. For 99% of the stuff you'll do, a caliper is probably the correct instrument. If you *need* a micrometer, then you might want to take it to someone with some experience using one. I use a caliper for the majority of the measurements I take, but there are times I need to know down to the .0001'' and a micrometer is one tool that will do it.
A decent dial or digital caliper will measure in 4 modes. Inside, outside, depth, and step. Seems a lot of people are not familiar with the step measuring technique. Here's a link to measuring with calipers.
http://littlemachineshop.com/Instructions/UsingCalipers.pdf
You generally cannot use a caliper to measure a brake rotor, except for a new one. After they have been run, the rotor has a raised edge on it where the pads don't contact, and this edge prevents the caliper from seating down on the polished/worn portion of the rotor.
A micrometer has tips that allow it to fully contact the worn portion of the rotor, and they do make calipers with special tips that also are intended just for brake rotor measuring.
Charles
You generally cannot use a caliper to measure a brake rotor, except for a new one. After they have been run, the rotor has a raised edge on it where the pads don't contact, and this edge prevents the caliper from seating down on the polished/worn portion of the rotor.
A micrometer has tips that allow it to fully contact the worn portion of the rotor, and they do make calipers with special tips that also are intended just for brake rotor measuring.
For something like checking brakes it should be fine. I wouldn't leave the battery in it, though. Seems to use it up even when turned off.
Charles is right.
However, I think a cheap set of HF calipers could be easily modified to clear the raised edge. A few minutes with a die grinder (or Dremel tool) should do it. At 10 bucks a pop not much to lose and it should be more than adequate to measure the thickness of a brake rotor with reasonable accuracy. It's a brake rotor after all, not exactly rocket science.
Can someone recommend me one? Im thinking of getting the one from harbor freight since its only like $10. Are they accurate? This is for brake job.

Can someone recommend me one? Im thinking of getting the one from harbor freight since its only like $10. Are they accurate? This is for brake job.