anndel
Well-known member
I'm getting ready to do a bunch of brake jobs on my wife's car and our 1993 Toyota pickup in a few weeks. Any decent Micrometer recommendations? Mitutoyo? Starrett? Performance Tool? Thanks
Central tools is what I've used for years, and yes they are specifically for brakes. Just type in brake rotor micrometer. Are you just trying to see if there in specific or you plan on turning the rotors? In most cases rotors are cheap and I would just replace them.
Central tools is what I've used for years, and yes they are specifically for brakes. Just type in brake rotor micrometer. Are you just trying to see if there in specific or you plan on turning the rotors? In most cases rotors are cheap and I would just replace them.
I've been looking at a quality micrometer too myself, why would it need to be a pointed end for checking disc's rather than a standard flat end ?
I was an Automotive machinist for 22+ years and even new rotors should be machined, 98 out of 100 were warped straight out of the box.
While this may be true it should be taken with caution. Putting them on the avg old brake lathe with the avg operator isn't going to help and that little warp doesn't hurt squat anyway. We can see by a steady stream of issues here giving more to worry about and research the more the confusion.I was an Automotive machinist for 22+ years and even new rotors should be machined, 98 out of 100 were warped straight out of the box.
It's a break rotor. Not a crank in a 1000 HP hemi. Buy the cheapest micyou can find. Close enough.
How far out do you find new OEM quality rotors? I am asking about good or best quality rotors, not the cheap ****
Some times you do not have measure the old rotor.
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But I have about everything to sustain life, we got a mic or 3 so the mechanic pulled one out the other day for a specialized engine which was ruined so anything within a couple thou would been sufficient,,, but where would the avg Joe even need to measure something within a thousand???Why buy the cheapest mic?
You never know, in the future he might find a need for it which requires better accuracy and he has to go out and buy another mic. Buy a good one now, and be done with it.
I always wonder, I got all this stuff, I got micrometers and a simple digital caliper has really replaced it all.
But I have about everything to sustain life, we got a mic or 3 so the mechanic pulled one out the other day for a specialized engine which was ruined so anything within a couple thou would been sufficient,,, but where would the avg Joe even need to measure something within a thousand???
WTF you guys work on you need precice equipment? Chances are he already doesn't have an HF digital caliper, start there, its about like the cherry picker and come along, most can find some use for it.
Play around with the HF caliper to get a feel for what a few thousands is. Even doing engine work, a guy can feel a cylinder and tell if it needs to be bored.
The place I can recall using the caliper is golf cart valves, sandng the little thingy a couple thou and its plus or minus .004.
While a guy was there could get a set of telescoping gages at that price. Those would be the first 2 tools and see if a guy really needed anything beyond that.
Sadly much of the problem is that many can not distinguish that and a few thousandths.