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Slide 001: Precision Measuring Instruments

Slide Visual

Precision Measuring Instruments

Slide Overview

This slide covers the primary precision measuring instruments used in machine shop operations: micrometers, calipers, dial indicators, and gauge blocks.

Instruction Notes

Outside Micrometer

The outside micrometer is the most important precision measuring tool in the machine shop. It measures external dimensions to 0.001" (with vernier: 0.0001").

Reading a micrometer: 1. Read the sleeve: each numbered division = 0.100"; each small line = 0.025" 2. Read the thimble: each line = 0.001" (0-24 around the circumference) 3. If equipped with a vernier scale: find the vernier line aligned with a thimble line = 0.0001"

Example: Sleeve shows 3 (0.300) + 1 additional line (0.025) = 0.325. Thimble shows 17 = 0.017. Reading: 0.342". Vernier line 6 aligns = 0.3426".

Proper technique: Use the ratchet stop for consistent pressure. Hold the frame in one hand, the workpiece touches the anvil, and advance the spindle with the ratchet. Take the reading when the ratchet clicks.

Digital Calipers

Digital calipers measure outside, inside, and depth dimensions to 0.001" (some to 0.0005"). Less accurate than micrometers (±0.001" vs. ±0.0001") but more versatile.

Uses: Quick checks, comparative measurements, depth measurement, step measurement. Not suitable for final inspection of tight-tolerance dimensions.

Dial Indicators

Type Resolution Travel Primary Use
Standard dial indicator 0.001" 0-1" Runout, alignment, flatness
Dial test indicator (DTI) 0.0005" ±0.030" Fine alignment, centering
Last word indicator 0.0005" ±0.015" Tight-space alignment

Key distinction: Dial indicators measure plunger travel (axial). Dial test indicators measure stylus deflection (lever-type). DTIs are preferred for machine alignment due to their compact size and ability to reach tight spaces.

Gauge Blocks (Jo Blocks)

Precision ground blocks used as dimensional standards. Available in sets of 81 or 112 blocks covering any dimension in 0.0001" increments. They are wrung together (pressed and slid) to build precise stack heights for calibration, sine bar setups, and height gauge reference.

Grade Tolerance Use
Grade 0 (AAA) ±0.000002" Laboratory calibration
Grade 1 (AA) ±0.000004" Inspection room reference
Grade 2 (A+) ±0.000008" Shop floor calibration
Grade 3 (B) ±0.000016" Workshop use

Key Talking Points

  • The micrometer is the gold standard for external dimension measurement
  • Calipers are for quick checks; micrometers are for final verification
  • Dial indicators measure deviations, not absolute dimensions
  • Never drop, bang, or mistreat measuring instruments—accuracy is easily destroyed

Learning Objectives (Concept Check)

  • Can students read an outside micrometer to 0.001"?
  • Can students distinguish when to use calipers vs. micrometers?
  • Do students understand the difference between a dial indicator and a dial test indicator?

Last Updated: 2026-03-19