use an adjustable wrenchI am trying to determine my bow rail diameter. I have a 2006 grady 208. I believe it is a 1 inch diameter bow rail but does anyone know for sure?
Heck, that's cheaper than a box of cereal......If you pass a Harbor Freight on the way, grab a few of these. Measures ID,OD, and depth. Or spend a few more bucks on a digital model.
6 In. Utility Caliper
Amazing deals on this 6In Utility Caliper at Harbor Freight. Quality tools & low prices.www.harborfreight.com
But then you have to spend the next 2 hours trying to figure out how to read that vernier scale...Heck, that's cheaper than a box of cereal......
Look at the picture, I don't think its a vernier scale, just line up the 0 and you get an inch reading. If it were a vernier, I'd say it would be pretty much only good to use as a ruler.But then you have to spend the next 2 hours trying to figure out how to read that vernier scale...
I got one of the digital calipers on sale several years ago, something less than 10 bucks. I don't use it a lot but its pretty good for the money. I am not sure I'd set up critical bearing clearances with it, but for home shop use, its a steal. And I am on the original button cell battery.Heck, that's cheaper than a box of cereal......
I was just making a joke because trying to determine 1.0 inches from 0.875 or 1.125 won't require reading the vernier, but that Harbor Freight caliper is exactly a vernier scaleLook at the picture, I don't think its a vernier scale, just line up the 0 and you get an inch reading. If it were a vernier, I'd say it would be pretty much only good to use as a ruler.
The pic looks like two linear/arithmetic scales. One English/American and the bottom metricI was just making a joke because trying to determine 1.0 inches from 0.875 or 1.125 won't require reading the vernier, but that Harbor Freight caliper is exactly a vernier scale
Page not found – Physics 50
www.physics.hmc.edu
I don’t know what to tell you. That type of caliper is literally called a vernier caliper, whether it’s SAE, metric, or both.The pic looks like two linear/arithmetic scales. One English/American and the bottom metric
I stand corrected. I looked at a blow up of the ad pic. I guess its reads .801 or there abouts. I am thinking I was recalling slide rules. Digital calipers are a lot simplerI don’t know what to tell you. That type of caliper is literally called a vernier caliper, whether it’s SAE, metric, or both.
No more bad engineering jokes from me. I’ve gotten lazy over the years because 95% of the time I use digital calipers at work. The other 5% of the time is my own personal dial caliper. Vernier calipers are a PITA to figure out exact measurements and it takes me too long, hence the joke…