Adam Savage's Favorite Tools: Dial Caliper

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  • čas přidán 8. 01. 2020
  • Many of you have asked about the tools used in One Day Builds and seen around Adam's workshop, so we're starting a new series putting a spotlight on some of Adam's favorite and most essential tools. Adam starts with his favorite calipers, and explains why it's like having a superpower--to precisely measure!
    SE Dial Caliper amzn.to/35AQsBi
    Brown & Sharpe Dial Caliper amzn.to/2R5QjAS
    Mitutoyo Digital Caliper amzn.to/308uBAi
    Shot and edited by Norman Chan
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 782

  • @tested
    @tested  Před 4 lety +59

    Here are the items Adam is talking about in his video: SE Dial Caliper amzn.to/35AQsBi
    Brown & Sharpe Dial Caliper amzn.to/2R5QjAS
    Mitutoyo Digital Caliper amzn.to/308uBAi
    Disclaimer: Tested may earn an affiliate commission when you buy through the links here.

    • @leepuckett9706
      @leepuckett9706 Před 4 lety +8

      It should be noted that the quality has been significantly reduced as most components are made in China. Be careful not to drop any of these calipers as it may ruin the gear mechanisms. Look for older Brown & Sharpe calipers made by the Swiss or older Starrett 120A series for some quality tools.

    • @RACOONBACON
      @RACOONBACON Před 4 lety +1

      Adam Savage’s Tested I calibrate these almost daily. Thanks for speaking about their importance.

    • @tonythemedtravels
      @tonythemedtravels Před 4 lety +2

      I've been thinking about this for a while now, but I think it would be awesome if Adam Savage had a Masterclass (on Masterclass.com) on making things. It could have lessons on how to start or become a good maker, essential tools, useful skills to develop, etc.

    • @mauromasucci347
      @mauromasucci347 Před 4 lety +1

      How do you feel when people use calipers to mark materials by scoring the calipers tips along it?

    • @aetheldread
      @aetheldread Před 4 lety +2

      @@leepuckett9706 I was wondering whether he tested the new models out or not... because like so many good things from the past... new iterations drop their quality control and shop out production to the lowest bidder

  • @goat325
    @goat325 Před 4 lety +751

    "I have some very specific feelings about calipers"
    Yes, this is why I am here.

    • @jameskribs2258
      @jameskribs2258 Před 4 lety +22

      I have been teaching in engineering labs for the last 7 years, and the students always ask "why are all the calipers dial?" or "are you too cheap to buy digital?". The answer I give every time is "We use dial because they never run out of batteries. There will be a day when you are using a digital caliper and they will be out of batteries, and in all likelihood, it will be when you are in an impossible position and cannot even take the time to go get a new battery."
      Also, calipers are great to show the difference between a slip fit, press fit, and an interference fit

    • @geoffreychadwick9229
      @geoffreychadwick9229 Před 4 lety +5

      @@jameskribs2258 So true. The one advantage to display is when trying to fit into a tight spot - sometimes the dial makes the head of the caliper a bit too big.
      Other advantage of analog - you can "calibrate" them yourself with the base of the dial and a couple blocks and get a feel that you know you're right - if the digital ones drift, there is no needle movement to give you a sense of consistency or accuracy.

    • @xray1292
      @xray1292 Před 4 lety +5

      @@jameskribs2258 always two new batteries in the micrometer case...

    • @wobblysauce
      @wobblysauce Před 4 lety +1

      IT hasn't stopped you yet.

    • @cravenmoorehead5636
      @cravenmoorehead5636 Před 2 lety

      I just cant get my self to trust any digital instrument. Idk why but even if they are the most trusted expensive blah blah. I just cant do it.

  • @vshazam
    @vshazam Před 4 lety +135

    In the junk drawer when I was growing up were a bunch of cartoon character (Mickey Mouse, Goofy, Trix Rabbit) wrist watches, some disassembled. My dad died when I was young so I had no clue wtf that was about. Years later I came across his dial caliper, and he had replaced the dial hand with the watch hand from a Mickey Mouse watch that was his gloved hand pointing. It was a really satisfying mystery to solved

    • @heroslippy6666
      @heroslippy6666 Před 4 lety +3

      Oh my, that is great xD

    • @Varaqouis
      @Varaqouis Před 4 lety +3

      That's just fantastic. I love it.

    • @bitfinesse
      @bitfinesse Před 4 lety +8

      Did you cry? I would have drowned in tears man. Holy. Shit. What a treasure of an experience. I bet that told you a lot about your dad.

    • @WilliamAlanPhoto
      @WilliamAlanPhoto Před 4 lety

      Great story! Thank you for sharing!

    • @metalman6708
      @metalman6708 Před 3 lety +3

      Your dad thought so much of you that a tool he probably used dozens of times a day for most days he was working that he took it apart and put something in it that would make him think about you everytime he used it.

  • @Cary_Glenn
    @Cary_Glenn Před 4 lety +314

    When I was a professional blacksmith we would joke, “Measure with micrometer, mark with chalk, cut with axe”.

    • @DanielSultana
      @DanielSultana Před 3 lety +5

      I don't get it

    • @jetaddict420
      @jetaddict420 Před 3 lety +24

      @@DanielSultana because you arent a blacksmith

    • @razvan-sorindumitru719
      @razvan-sorindumitru719 Před 3 lety +19

      @@DanielSultana you lose accuracy, that's the joke.

    • @cdd7672
      @cdd7672 Před rokem +1

      I like the above statement so much that about the 3d print it as my logo, engrave with laser on the side of ...and more. :)

  • @grandolddrummer
    @grandolddrummer Před 4 lety +2

    Growing up, my Dad worked as a machinist. He had all kinds of cool measuring tools that I got to learn about as a young lad. Fast forward to me being in my late 20s, I got into woodworking. I had a cheap set of calipers that got the job done, but I could tell its .001" and an actual .001" were slightly different. So I got my first set of Starrett dial calipers. They weren't the made in USA ones, but they were miles ahead of where I was. When they came in the mail, I sent a picture to Dad of my first Starrett tool. Later that year, for my birthday, he gave me his old toolbox with his calipers in it and tons of other amazing things. For his birthday a few weeks later, I made him a valet tray with as much precision as I could attain. It turned out great and is one of my professors achievements.
    Anyway, calipers hold a special place in my heart and they're a tool that anyone who makes things needs to have in their arsenal.

  • @harveysmith100
    @harveysmith100 Před 4 lety +193

    Never needed to measure anything that accurately.
    Bought a set anyway.
    Now I need to measure everything that accurately so can't be without them

    • @djsomeguy
      @djsomeguy Před 4 lety +2

      Calipers are one thing, micrometers take it to another entire level again...I find myself using my caliper quite often though not even being a machinist.

    • @TonyBullard
      @TonyBullard Před 4 lety +10

      @@djsomeguy Psh, Electron Microscope or GTFO

    • @djsomeguy
      @djsomeguy Před 4 lety +2

      @@TonyBullard Haha damn straight, electron microscope ftw!

    • @sdcsuxd33
      @sdcsuxd33 Před 4 lety +4

      I am a grind shop machinist. I use a 0-1” mic every day and the super mic at least one day a week for precision parts (aerospace and racing, cryogenics, etc) Super micrometer can measure .00005” tolerances. We use calipers for STARTING stock sizes. Lol

    • @I..cast..fireball
      @I..cast..fireball Před 4 lety

      @@sdcsuxd33 super mic? All the mics where I work will do. 00005

  • @Grammy_Indyof2
    @Grammy_Indyof2 Před 4 lety +9

    My husband was a machinist and I always enjoyed watching him work. One of the tools I saw him use the most was his dial calipers.

  • @feelthepayne88
    @feelthepayne88 Před 4 lety +118

    A good set of calipers are one of those things that once you get them, you'll wonder how you ever got by without them.

    • @mrchihuahuaboy4306
      @mrchihuahuaboy4306 Před rokem +2

      I don’t know how to read them

    • @Meekerextreme
      @Meekerextreme Před rokem +1

      I agree, but honestly for "most" people like myself just a digital $20 set off Amazon works wonders.

    • @andrew-rn9ui
      @andrew-rn9ui Před rokem +1

      I don't even get what you'd need them for unless you are a specialist building extremely specific things
      Your average workshop I don't think would need calipers 😅

  • @robbunchanumbers
    @robbunchanumbers Před 4 lety +9

    As somebody who cleans and calibrates calipers nearly every day in my job, Adam's grimy B&S nearly made me cry. :)

  • @Tommiart
    @Tommiart Před 4 lety +11

    As a painter I had a similar experience buying my first solvent tin with the little perforated tray that suspends the brushes. And this was only last year yet I totally identify with your "big boy" feelings. ❤️

  • @wetryanycheesedotcom
    @wetryanycheesedotcom Před 4 lety +57

    I love Adam's spirit! The way he gets so excited about his experiences and looks like he's just bursting to share it with the world is so wholesome and inspiring.
    Love you Adam, never change

    • @ZippoVarga
      @ZippoVarga Před 4 lety

      Snug...if you really want to geek out about Adam's enthusiasm on a more personal level, I highly recommend his book, Every Tool's a Hammer. It's my Bible next to my Machinists Bible. Cheers! Zip~

  • @PerennialBag181
    @PerennialBag181 Před 3 lety +1

    When he talked about measuring to the side or middle of a mark on a ruler, I felt that. That spoke to me.

  • @SpeakShibboleth
    @SpeakShibboleth Před 4 lety +3

    I used to use a dial caliper for years but digital was like a revelation. Being able to switch on the fly from metric to imperial is great and easily zeroing them at any measurement to take deviation readings is amazing. Sure, you'll need to replace the batteries once or twice a year but it's totally worth it.

  • @thumbwarriordx
    @thumbwarriordx Před 4 lety +64

    Shoutout to Vernier scale calipers as Adam in his professional wisdom has neglected to mention the poor man's non-battery-reliant option.
    No fancy mechanics, no electronics, still gets you to thousandth resolution.
    Maybe not worth buying new at this point but very handy when you find a pair in your dad's toolbox.

    • @xureality
      @xureality Před 4 lety +4

      It really depends. My chineseum digital calipers crapped out after a few months, and I know that while this is literally a sample size of one, at least a vernier will never let you down. Unless you bent it or something. If you can't fine one in your dad's toolbox, it's still worth getting one new just to have one on standby.

    • @Brok3nC4rrot
      @Brok3nC4rrot Před 4 lety +7

      I got my Mum to buy me a Mitutoyo Vernier caliper (with both .001" and .02mm scales) for christmas; I asked for Vernier because of the mechanical simplicity and the fact that you never need to zero a slider

    • @edrcozonoking
      @edrcozonoking Před 4 lety +1

      l use calipers often enough to appreciate the digital ones and not have an issue with battery life. I love my Mitutoyo Digital calipers but it's fun to hand my Vernier scale (non dial) calipers to people and watch them try to figure it out.

    • @macmurfy2jka
      @macmurfy2jka Před 4 lety

      I personally hate using vernier calipers. I don’t know about you but i can never get a good reading quickly or a quick reading thats accurate. Never an issue with the digital calipers and hardly one with the dial variants.

    • @wasbeen
      @wasbeen Před 4 lety +7

      I have to admit a smugness to being able to read a vernier scale that muggles cannot. And mine are 8", coz size does matter.

  • @gregcollins3404
    @gregcollins3404 Před 4 lety +2

    I grew up doing woodworking with my dad measuring stuff to 1/16ths (plus or minus a scosh). Projects came out ok, but after getting into machining and becoming used to measuring to thou's, I was amazed at how much better projects turned out.

  • @fever040
    @fever040 Před 4 lety +311

    I'm glad ot use the metric systems. All these fractions would make me insane. 3/16 of an inch, 64/1000 of an inch/ I mean come on/

    • @Sirpalmbranch
      @Sirpalmbranch Před 4 lety +8

      Agreed! xD

    • @gerrye114
      @gerrye114 Před 4 lety +27

      Calipers don't use fractions, they use thousandths of an inch. When dealing with the very small, thousandths are far better than metric

    • @eldrugoalex
      @eldrugoalex Před 4 lety +127

      @@gerrye114 That makes no sense. Metric system is a decimal-based system.

    • @CapOfXav
      @CapOfXav Před 4 lety +73

      @@gerrye114 Not really.. Metric system have micron, which are 2½ times more precise than a thousandth.

    • @dorsk84
      @dorsk84 Před 4 lety +44

      This is 'merica. We use freedom units here!!!! Not that commie stuff..... /sarcasm

  • @TDPlusPT
    @TDPlusPT Před 4 lety +1

    Love the way Adam tells stories, little details about what street corner the shop was on etc really makes it.

  • @kukrae
    @kukrae Před 4 lety

    Yes! I grew up working/hanging out in my uncle's gunsmithing shop in the 70s/80s. His dial calipers fascinated me. Then he got an electronic set and they just weren't as fun. He passed in 2001 and I have that dial set in their case. I still use them, too :) Love this video!!

  • @geoffreychadwick9229
    @geoffreychadwick9229 Před 4 lety +1

    I still remember the first pair of dial calipers I was ever given, and still have them. At my first job in the engineering field (as an intern) my boss gave them to me and told me they'd be useful.
    Dial calipers are so useful and yet so few people know what they are or how to use them. When my wife needed to measure something small and asked me where the calipers were I was so proud.

  • @real_ryansama
    @real_ryansama Před 4 lety +3

    More of these videos please. ❤
    Love hearing Adam talk about tools and stories, and just making in general.... " I live to be Savage. "

  • @BLTspace
    @BLTspace Před 4 lety

    I worked in flooring for many years and whether it was cutting in plywood or the flooring itself, things like "leave the pencil line on" and "take the pencil line off" etc... became part of my vocabulary. We'd often mark things inside and take it outside to cut. That was my fathers way of making sure I cut what he saw when he marked it. It's a really important point to make and even the width of a pencil line is massive when it comes to getting something right.

  • @jimlester5003
    @jimlester5003 Před 4 lety

    Adam, I've been using mitutoyo digital calipers for about 30 years at work. At home, I have dial calipers and rely on them all the time for multiple measurements. I still have an old set of vernier calipers. I use them sparingly because my mental math isn't what it used to be. Lol. I enjoy the fact that you still have work remnants on your hands, cuts and bandages. You are a true craftsman. Thank you for sharing what you do with the world! Have a great day. Jim

  • @billyc9151
    @billyc9151 Před 4 lety

    I worked in a machine shop for many years making parts for huge water valves, there were so many 'toys' I loved. The giant 72" inside micrometer kit was my most coveted tool, as well as the beautiful old 48'" vernier scale calipers. The tools made the (cast iron) machining I was doing fun...for a dirty job anyhow!

  • @jschram84
    @jschram84 Před rokem +1

    As a quality supervisor, I appreciate this mans passion for calipers.

  • @IanTheWoodchuck
    @IanTheWoodchuck Před 4 lety +2

    I just got my first 3D printer, and calipers were on my "must have" list of accessories for giving this printer a proper home and a long lived future!

  • @WyldstaarStudios
    @WyldstaarStudios Před 4 lety +3

    I got my dial caliper when I went to art school as part of the standard art supplies package required. I'd never known such precision was even possible, and I still have the same caliper decades later.

  • @LilyCraven1
    @LilyCraven1 Před 4 lety

    I am a set builder for stop motion animation and bought these calipers after watching this video and instantly fell in love with them, using them on a job! Thanks, Adam!

  • @JamBanjo
    @JamBanjo Před 4 lety +1

    Killing it on all the content recently- love the longer videos and one day builds etc but these little glimpses into techniques, working practices and behind the scenes are absolutely fascinating, thanks!

  • @terpcj
    @terpcj Před 4 lety

    Right there with you. Many, many moons ago, I started with vernier calipers, but in marginal light they were sometimes vexing to read. Then I went digital and, as realized by so many, the batteries inevitably were dead when I wanted to use them. So then I went dial -- dial with both imperial and metric scales so I could bound between what was common and what was sane without having to endure tool clutter. I've never looked back. It's used at least as much as that scratched-up clear plastic ruler that always seems to be at arm's reach when I need a quick-and-dirty measurement.

  • @hashimina_
    @hashimina_ Před 4 lety

    I used to have my dial calipers when i was working for my dad's shop as an machinist. And i love it

  • @ZippoVarga
    @ZippoVarga Před 4 lety +7

    Every work station in my shop has a set of calipers at the ready. Some digital, some analog, but there always close at hand whether I'm at the Electronics bench, the engine bench, the lathe or the mill and drill press. They're the single most invaluable tool when it comes to finite measurements that are absolutely critical. Thanks for reaffirming this with this video Adam! Cheers! Zip~ p.s. Your Book is my Bible right next to my Machinists Bible.

    • @cravenmoorehead5636
      @cravenmoorehead5636 Před 2 lety +1

      Well Zip. Now all you gotta do is learn to read em. Lol. Great content buddy.

  • @lamagra22
    @lamagra22 Před 4 lety

    I appreciated the comment about learning, at some point doing carpentry, that you'll start to think about which side of the line you're measuring or cutting to.
    I learned that lesson a few years ago about whether to "take the line" or "leave the line" and it was like a bulb that went off in my head - suddenly some of the inaccurate cuts I had made in the past, despite feeling like I measured correctly, started to make sense.

  • @Mash4096
    @Mash4096 Před 2 lety

    I had to buy a caliper when i started technical aviation school 24 years ago, and i still cherish them today. This was not the dial type, but the "slide-ruler" type, but i remember being amazed when i learned how to read 1/20th of a mm. It's just genieus.

  • @2eme_voltigeur652
    @2eme_voltigeur652 Před 4 lety

    Throughout my studies I got to use mechanical calipers from Mitutoyo a lot. But always used those from the workshop at the uni. First thing I did when I graduated was buying one for myself. I love it, and find myself using it quite often ;)

  • @sadiqmohamed681
    @sadiqmohamed681 Před 4 lety

    I understand your feelings about when you bought your first dial calipers. In my mid 20s I decided I needed a professional multi-meter. This was an AVO, it was analogue, big and heavy, but it had a mirror on the scale. The needle was flat, and wider from front to back, but very narrow sideways. This meant you could line the needle up with its reflection to read the scale very accurately. This meter was expensive, but it was at the time the Rolls Royce of multimeters, and pretty much still is in the analogue world. It made me feel that I had arrived! I was a grown up electronics engineer at last! Even if all I all I was doing was fixing my Dad's radiogram, being able to bring out my AVO to take readings was such a great feeling of power. Another great video Adam.

  • @Wrecksy
    @Wrecksy Před 4 lety +19

    "I bought them at Fox Hardware on 4th and Mission back in 1992" - Dude, I can't remember what I bought last week.

    • @LeglessWonder
      @LeglessWonder Před 3 lety +1

      And I damn sure don’t remember the address of the store

  • @moetop
    @moetop Před 4 lety

    Your explanation of why you prefer the dial calipers is spot on. A local shop has vernier calipers (real cheap ones $3) Every time I am in there I pick up a couple.. the good part of a vernier is that it has both Metric and Inch, plus you get the same ability to judge if you are on the high side. Not quite as good as a dial, but still better than digital. The metric and inch is nice, so you don't have to do any calculations you have a converter in your hands.

  • @chazzmccloud36
    @chazzmccloud36 Před rokem

    My grandpa was a tool maker, and I inherited a bunch of his old measuring tools. I had almost no idea how to use them.
    I recently started working at a machine shop and have been getting a crash course in the art of measuring down to the nearest .0001.
    So now I'm dusting off grandpa's old calipers and measuring things around the house.
    Going from 15 years as a tree trimmer, only measuring in terms of paces, this is a complete change.

  • @JerryD9000
    @JerryD9000 Před 4 lety +1

    I was a metrologist in a plastic molding facility for a while, and even with a large assortment of measuring tools at my disposal, including a CMM....the dial caliper (even a really nice digital caliper), were by far the MOST used tool in the lab. Measurement is not only it's own science, it is really an art.

  • @CannonRanger-1
    @CannonRanger-1 Před 4 lety +1

    There is a special and deeply profound bond between a person and their first set of dial calipers.

  • @walkinmn
    @walkinmn Před 4 lety

    I'm kind of an amateur maker but I've been doing it all my life. Recently got a 3D printer and i have another side project. Now that I'm venturing into designing 3D parts for printing, i need a caliper and have been looking at a lot of them, and was leaning more towards a dial one, somehow looked more useful than a digital one and Adam just confirmed it for me, also the SE one is cheaper on the Amazon of my country, so i think i just got the perfect caliper for me thanks to Adam.

  • @LotusBoi1989
    @LotusBoi1989 Před 4 lety

    YES. Impossible to tell if something is a little "light" or "heavy" with digital calipers. LOVED my dial calipers when I was in the machine shop. I was always super particular about keeping them clean and in their case when not actively measuring something. They were my baby.

  • @gallimead
    @gallimead Před 4 lety

    Yes.. yes.. and yes, when Adam was clarifying about measuring to a mark, and getting a feel for it. Digital are good for documentation, however dial is a test of your skills.

  • @RyanStonedonCanadianGaming
    @RyanStonedonCanadianGaming Před 4 lety +45

    Adam Savages favourite tools:
    All of them.

  • @deadman0254
    @deadman0254 Před 4 lety

    I got a dial caliper from a (at the time) coworker. I had just started in the trade at the time and didn't know the value of a lot of tools nor had the money for any really good ones. My now former coworker was trying to make room in his toolbox for some new tool he was getting and decided to sell some of his other tools to us in the shop. Got one of his dial calipers for $40 CAD. Fast forward a few months. I had started to take notice that the caliper I bought off the guy was crazy accurate, to the point I trusted it almost as much as my micrometer. After actually taking a good look at the thing, I realize it's a mitutoyo. It's obviously very old and still accurate. I even found at the bottom of the box for it a certificate of accuracy from mitutoyo themselves. I love the thing so much I made a custom built wooden case for it. I trust this caliper for any measurement I need to take with up to a 0.003" tolerance. No idea how much the thing was originally worth, but best $40 I've ever spent.

  • @mwiz100
    @mwiz100 Před 4 lety +1

    All very accurate. I also measured my hair when I first got some calipers. Invaluable tool even cheap crappy ones.
    It really does give you an ability to measure things like never before.

  • @BlueSparrow23
    @BlueSparrow23 Před 4 lety +3

    I got my first set of (digital) calipers about a year ago, and I totally understand the desire to go around measuring everything, but one thing stood out to me immediately upon receiving them that I didn't even consider when purchasing them... They are right-handed. I know it seems like it shouldn't matter, but as a lefty, it would be really nice to be able to use the dial wheel with my left thumb while being able to read the display. Maybe one day when I have my own shop and need calipers more frequently, I'll invest in a set of lefty calipers, but in the meantime I'll just make do. It would be really nice to see more precision tools be designed to be either ambidextrous, or have lefty versions for the same price, because it seems unfair that lefties have to pay more for essentially the same tools.

  • @addisonwoods9367
    @addisonwoods9367 Před 4 lety

    "Buying my first set of calipers felt like progressing from adolescence to adulthood"
    I know exactly what you mean. When I was 17 I took a class on jewelry and metal smithing at my college. It was the first that I had any practical need to measure in something as abstract (or so it felt at the time) as a thousandth. They were a plastic harbor freight poc, but I still have them hanging in my shop. In many ways, they were the marking point where I began to take pride in the parts of my work that are not immediately visible. Great video!

  • @duck3y27
    @duck3y27 Před 4 lety +1

    This video makes me even more proud of the fact that my Christmas gift this year was a caliper! Loved the video!

  • @patandbrandi
    @patandbrandi Před 4 lety

    adam is such a great teacher/explainer. very enjoyable to watch him talk about even mundane things

  • @stevenb7319
    @stevenb7319 Před 4 lety

    Nice! The pride you feel in using calipers is compounded when you graduate to machining tolerances of +0.0000 and -0.0003 and having to measure it with a micrometer. Try boring a hole on your mill to those tolerances. It’s really satisfying. Lots of free cuts required. Thanks for sharing.

  • @zook357
    @zook357 Před 4 lety

    Vernier Calipers were part of my Apprentice toolkit in the '70 as a machinist. Still have them. Still use them.

  • @senspartech3533
    @senspartech3533 Před 4 lety

    Mitutoyo Digital and Browne & Sharpe Dial Calipers is my exact setup!
    Im all about that dial.. Used the digital exclusively for years until it was temporarily misplaced. Then out came the dial and I haven't looked back.
    There really is something about it

  • @scottcampbell3778
    @scottcampbell3778 Před 4 lety

    Been a huge fan of Adam since the early mythbuster days. And I just love his excitement for what he does. His knowledge and understanding of the tasks and tools is incredible. So, Thank You Adam.

  • @nolansprojects2840
    @nolansprojects2840 Před 4 lety +47

    “Every tool’s a hammer” - Adam
    *DISCLAIMER* do NOT use calipers as a hammer! Turns out, not every tool is a hammer! 😂😂

    • @anne_frank_
      @anne_frank_ Před 4 lety +3

      I think they get classed as an instrument so it misses this rule 👍

    • @morriewyatt6234
      @morriewyatt6234 Před 4 lety +2

      I've seen instances of caliper inside jaws being used for chipping welding slag, and 1500mm verniers being used as a lever.
      Calipers with the middle of the main jaws worn out from measuring material still spinning in the lathe etc.
      Then there's the perennial "Precision G Clamp" stepping up in size typically by 25mm or 1" steps.
      Any form of abuse you can imagine (and many you probably wouldn't) is regrettably all too commonplace for these precision instruments.
      One company I know of decided that they would purchase such instruments for new engineering staff, to be the property of the staff member. An allowance was then added to the wages of these people to cover normal wear and tear expenses (contact points on test and dial indicators for example) All repair and replacement expenses had to come from the employee's pocket (hence the allowance). It is amazing how quickly the cost of company's instrument repair and replacement dropped.
      Another company used dial gauges in their manufacturing processes, and it was an absolute mystery how these gauges would conveniently break down on the night shift when the workers decided they had done enough for the day.
      (I started out my working life repairing these sorts of precision measuring instruments. Using as a hammer is just the start of the atrocities to which these instruments are subjected.)

    • @nolansprojects2840
      @nolansprojects2840 Před 4 lety

      Morrie Wyatt REALLY?! Wow, that’s insane! I suppose you see the worst of it as a repair man. Haha, that’s almost unbelievable, but then I think of the guys in the machine shop at work... and uhhh, yea, I could see why those things may happen! The allowance is a good idea, it keeps people liable for their actions. Very interesting! Thanks for sharing!

    • @metalman6708
      @metalman6708 Před 3 lety +1

      I also use my micrometers as a C clamp.

    • @nolansprojects2840
      @nolansprojects2840 Před 3 lety

      @@metalman6708 NOOO, Stop! lol, there was a kid that actually did that in my class. It makes me cringe so hard. XD

  • @pixl3l
    @pixl3l Před 4 lety +1

    I don't know what I like more. Good tools or Adams enthusiasm for showing his favourite things. ^^

  • @blazertundra
    @blazertundra Před 4 lety

    I didn't realize how much life needs a pair of calipers until I worked a brief stint as a machinist at a small manufacturing company. Funny thing is I felt more comfortable with the 20 year old dial calipers that nobody wanted to use than I did with the digital ones. Now I have my own set of dial calipers. $30 on Amazon and they work perfectly.

  • @reedbrousseau5884
    @reedbrousseau5884 Před 4 lety +1

    @Adam Savage’s Tested I use my dial calipers a lot when measuring real-world objects (I have three different sizes 4”/6”/12”) and modeling them in 3D. Recently I decided to consolize a PlayStation Portable, and I wanted to design a case that was a scale version of the original PlayStation 2. So instead of doing all the calculations to scale it down, I measured one of my spare consoles and input all of the measurements into a vector drawing in Inkscape and scaled it down. And then I used the measure tool in Inkscape (it’s definitely something you should try out, it’s pretty awesome to have a readout of the angle, and if your measurement line crosses several intersections, it gives you the distance between the individual intersections, and the overall length, plus you can adjust the precision) to transfer into Fusion 360. I use Inkscape a lot for a measurement device, because I can scan a PCB for instance, with a quarter or washer on the platten to correct for one axis being stretched (which I measure with my dial caliper) and then I have a representation to trace for import into 3D applications (Inkscape can export as DXF which is pretty universal for import), or measure directly (I usually setup guides at the points I measure and color code them). I usually use four digits of precision in Inkscape and then round.
    I should note that I have an older tabloid size Epson flatbed scanner that goes up to 2400dpi (I can’t remember the model right now) that I bought for $20 at a thrift store and it serves me fairly well for a measurement device as well as scanning documents. So if someone has a need to measure things, but can’t afford a dial caliper (mine are all Shars brand I bought on eBay, the six inch I only paid $8 for) a flatbed scanner could work for some measurements and be supplemented with an inexpensive dial caliper in the 6” to 8” range.

  • @luistello1971
    @luistello1971 Před 7 měsíci

    Thanks for sharing Adam.

  • @leelaver802
    @leelaver802 Před 4 lety

    I totally agree with you on dial v's digital. I find the dial much quicker to read and much more intuitive. I am a jeweller by trade and am still using the Mitutoyo vernier I bought as an apprentice in 1992. Never had to change a battery. ;-)

  • @fixittony
    @fixittony Před 3 lety

    I bought my very first dial caliper back in ‘96. I was working at a tool and die shop as a student the shop allowed me to buy it from their shop account and then have the cost deducted from my paycheck. So by the end of the summer when I went back to university my calipers were paid for!

  • @reverendstephenlina7380

    I’m a CNC Machinist and all I use are Dial Calipers for pretty much the same reasons. Also the don’t commit suicide when a drop of coolant gets on them. I have several pairs but my Brown and Sharps are my hands down favorites.

  • @snakesocks
    @snakesocks Před 4 lety +1

    There's something very satisfying about taking a reading from a set of analogue Vernier calipers.

  • @robertnava7777
    @robertnava7777 Před 4 lety +1

    Thank-you, Adam! I've always wanted a set of calipers, but I didn't know which was a reliable brand. I also battled between digital and analog for a while before settling in analog for the very same reason: dead batteries.

  • @super9248
    @super9248 Před 4 lety

    I have recently started shopping for my first set of callipers, this helps a lot! Thank you!

  • @capnclawhammer3024
    @capnclawhammer3024 Před 4 lety

    Started using calipers when I worked in an industrial hardware store down in the Port of Houston area, part of a rather heavily worn Stanley folding flat ruler like a truncated version of the one Roy Underhill used on the Woodwright series. An employee at a scientific instrument company that was located in the same neighborhood was always looking at me askance when he came in; seems he thought I was transgressing against proper collector's etiquette by using such an obvious antique in such an everyday setting. But dang it, it's just so USEFUL!

  • @knovives
    @knovives Před 4 lety

    Dad, a mechanical engineer, gave me my first caliper when I was 10. It was a plastic one but still really accurate. I think knowing how to use it at such a young age completely defined the way I think. 20 years later I still have it.

  • @tylerfrizzell3319
    @tylerfrizzell3319 Před 4 lety

    I always used tape measures and rulers only for a long time, until abit over 4 months ago. I completely agree, exclusively use them now only just dial calipers

  • @dimide5180
    @dimide5180 Před 4 lety

    I have the same digital caliper! haven't used dial calipers yet though. Got to love the engineering and precisions required to measure 0.000! So much goes into that level of accuracy. Thanks for the tool share, looking forward to seeing the other tools!

  • @ryandury
    @ryandury Před 4 lety

    Living in a mixed metric/imperial world, the digital calipers are awesome. I'll switch between the two based on convenience so I really like that. One minor thing I wish mine could do is limit them to a specific fraction, i.e. 1/16, 1/32, 1/64... Mine go up to 1/128 and that's not always needed. Sure, it's easy to divide, but that takes away from the power of the toggle to switch between inches, mm, and fractions! In any case, I love mine and you're totally right: It feels like leveling up when you get your first pair. Great series :)

  • @ChannelX24
    @ChannelX24 Před 4 lety +27

    The Metric System has left the chat.

  • @IPostSwords
    @IPostSwords Před 4 lety

    I use calipers constantly in my work with antiques. Usually cheap ones, because I have a tendency to leave them at locations after measuring things. Calipers are amazing, such an essential tool in any toolkit

  • @thx113868
    @thx113868 Před 4 lety

    Well as soon as the episode was over went to Amazon and got a pair of the dial calipers.
    Thanks for that, I build scale models and that will be very useful.
    Thanks

  • @KyleBrinkerhoff
    @KyleBrinkerhoff Před 4 lety

    I never really bothered with metric until a pair of mitutoyo calipers were given to me at my job, within a week I just lived in it! since then I have gone on to purchase several mitutoyo tools, from dial indicators to gauge blocks all the way to purchasing a surface plate made by them. the affinity for precision is addictive, theirs a certain part of your brain that just freaking kicks off when you make things align to a level where these tools are operating at their absolute resolution limits. so satisfying. I never really considered myself a scholar of metrology but now I find myself opting to work at tolerances well beyond what is necessary for the task at hand simply because the challenge is so fun. plus the compliments at work are good fun too.

  • @CONTAINERMAN68
    @CONTAINERMAN68 Před 4 lety

    Yep, I got digital and dial calipers! They come in handy when measuring 1:87 scale parts for scratch building trucks and trailers.

  • @dpear3
    @dpear3 Před 4 lety

    Pretty sure I commented a while ago about how there could be a show about Adam's favorite niche tools. Happy it turned into something I shouldn't care about but absolutely do.

  • @vicmiller7191
    @vicmiller7191 Před 4 lety

    Yes I do like the calibers I have and even a micrometer for those even finer measurements. Thanks for sharing...Vic

  • @jeremytravis360
    @jeremytravis360 Před 4 lety

    Yes I'll go with that Adam. I have quite a collection of callipers and micrometers and dial is best. Quick and simple to read.

  • @Iskelderon
    @Iskelderon Před 4 lety +2

    Calipers, one of the most powerful tools in a prop maker's toolkit!
    I always have one or two good ones and a couple of cheap ones.

  • @MrJeepinZeke
    @MrJeepinZeke Před 4 lety

    As a machinist I approve of calipers. I use them constantly in work. They have many methods to measure something by.
    One thing I will say is do not be afraid to invest in a pair. It is absolutely worth it. And treat them nicely! Clean them, store them correctly, and use them correctly. They are wonderful tools that will elevate your making profoundly. If you invest in a good pair of 6” calipers they will last your entire life.
    Precision and consistency makes making a pleasure.

  • @peterkelley6344
    @peterkelley6344 Před 4 lety

    And unexpected discussion; but a fun one. Thanks you, Adam, for this unique exploration into very fine measurement work.

  • @dodger0101
    @dodger0101 Před 4 lety

    Thanks for sharing Adam. I tend to use a micrometer when machining although I do also use digital calipers from time to time.

  • @rcbif101
    @rcbif101 Před 4 lety +1

    The depth-rod or tail is an often overlooked very useful part of the calipers. Combined with some dykem, holding the calipers at just a very slight angle, you can scribe lines on a part for cutting reference or hole locating. I've made some very accurate parts this way.

  • @ryansrandomshop
    @ryansrandomshop Před 4 lety

    I have the exact same thought when it comes to this, I almost exclusively use my Mitutoyo dial calipers, I barely touch the digital one because as you said the batteries always die and it's so annoying, I even made a beautiful birch case for the dial calipers I have because I got it used from a swap meet for an amazing deal

  • @topankoke
    @topankoke Před 4 lety

    Totally relate!
    At work we have Digital Caliper but it's just a different feeling. If it dies well your fu**ed. So at home I have a analogue caliper. And in my back pack a small one.
    For a long time I thought you just can measure (mm) but one day my father showed me there are different markings with which you were able to measure 1/10 of a mm. A big discovery and impressive back then.
    As a product developer it's one of the best and most used tool.
    Thank you Adam! :)

  • @chasevogt2090
    @chasevogt2090 Před 4 lety +1

    Lol running around the house with a new superpower....that definitely hit home that's precisely what I did when I bought my first set of calipers

  • @SmoofDizzle
    @SmoofDizzle Před 4 lety +1

    I love using calipers and micrometers at my job. So satisfying

    • @SuperFred001
      @SuperFred001 Před 4 lety

      I used to work in a chocolate factory,We used micrometers to check thickness of the liquid chocolate. that was the weirdest use of micrometer ever.

  • @bbb462cid
    @bbb462cid Před 4 lety

    I'm in Quality. I love the dial calipers. Battery never runs out, and it's always in the toolbox.

  • @Chakolit
    @Chakolit Před 4 lety

    I clicked on this video cause I also love calipers. I have an 8" Insize dial caliper and its so useful! Easy to make quick and precise measurements. While the insize calipers are a but more expensive all the main parts are metal which is great and they have a lovely case to protect them when not in use. It's a nice middle ground between the cheaper ones from the hardware store and the fancy super precise but expensive mitutoyo calipers.

  • @rogerwhittle2078
    @rogerwhittle2078 Před 4 lety

    The very best engineers I've ever worked with, always had a Vernier Caliper about their person, because 'about seventeen thou'..' was not enough. For years I used a 'proper' Vernier Caliper where you had to read off the centimeters or the inches and then, working to the nearest tenth, work out the thousandths using the vernier scale. However, over time, the old eyesight begins to let you down, unless the lighting is very bright so, I bought a digital caliper. I have never looked back. It is a beautiful tool and yes, I will admit to using it as an instant method of converting thou's to millimeters and vice versa. Being old, I mix the two standards because so much stock and screw threads are metric, but my lathe is calibrated in thousandths of an inch.

  • @fununclenerfs
    @fununclenerfs Před 4 lety

    My Brown & Sharpe has served me well for about those two decades, picked it up for a handful of quarters when I was working in a pawn shop, the digital ones sure are sexy though

  • @MiniTerrainDomain
    @MiniTerrainDomain Před 4 lety +1

    I do love my Mitutoyo Digital Caliper

  • @skalover98
    @skalover98 Před 4 lety

    I have two Mitutoyo 505-623s. I can read them at a glance with no errors and they are all metal. I bought my first 623 for $35 on ebay and instantly fell in love with them the first time I used them. I also have a Mitutoyo digital and it never gets used unless someone borrows it. The 623 is the best caliper ever made IMO, it's a shame they don't make them anymore.
    Also, to be pedantic and correct me if I am wrong, graduations are the marks in a measuring device, not gradations.

  • @dustinf11
    @dustinf11 Před 4 lety +1

    I really loved this video... Everything he said spoke to me and my experiences.
    Though, the batteries in my calipers seem to be immortal. I've never changed them in so many years... And use them almost daily.

    • @mikethelma
      @mikethelma Před 4 lety +1

      Like the batteries in the HP 12C calculator. I only changed them after 20 years. I figure I'd better not stock spares, the shelf life is probably less than the life in use. LOL

  • @Ninjan33r
    @Ninjan33r Před 4 lety

    You're a man after my own heart when it comes to dial calipers vs. electronic calipers.

  • @dg-hughes
    @dg-hughes Před 4 lety

    I bought a set of Vernier calipers many years ago mainly because they looked cool. I didn't know how to use them but eventually I did. The thing I found most interesting was I could measure the inside things like tubes.

  • @1320fastback
    @1320fastback Před 4 lety

    Dial Calipers are so useful for measuring Inside, Outside and Depth. Heck you don't even need to measure at all if you just need a drill bit for a certain bolt or something. Close the Caliper on the bolt and find the drill bit that is exactly the same size or just a tad bigger if needed.
    Interesting you talk of which side of the mark as you your skill progress. When I worked in a cabinet shop the owner took his time to teach us his way. When you make a cut you leave half the mark!

  • @LanceKirkman
    @LanceKirkman Před 4 lety

    Thank you Adam

  • @Netrunner1972
    @Netrunner1972 Před 4 lety +1

    I got mine back in the 80's when they were still made in Providence RI my home state.

  • @yeahwellfu
    @yeahwellfu Před 3 lety

    I really enjoy my Mitutoyo Vernier Caliper. Vernier scale is very cool to use