Calipers, dial or digital?

bertn

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My $15 digital canadian tire caliper has crapped out. Still works up to 2 inches but after that it starts acting up, like resetting at zero all of the sudden etc.
Worked fine for about two years but I think my next one should be something that last longer...

I pretty much only use it for the gun (reloading) hobby so don't really need it for other stuff.

Should I get another digital one or go for a dial model this time?
I don't want to spend too much but will not buy another one of the CT ones again.
Bought most of my reloading tools used but with measuring tools I don't know if it would be smart to try to save some bucks there.

Any recommendation what to get or know of a good sale?

Thx!
 
It's personal preference. One is no more accurate than the other, Despite that the digital may read to half a thou discrimination, it's not accurate to half a thou.
 
I have both.... A vintage no-name dial caliper and a princess auto special. Other than the batteries in the PA digital dying just when I was about to use it, I've had no issues.

BTW, neither one is exact when compared to the 1.000" Starrett standard I have. I think it may be time to spring for a better caliper.
 
Mitutoyo. Otherwise it doesn't matter what cheap piece of ^&*% you buy for around $15. It will be stamped with whomever is peddling it, but it will be made at the same place in China. If you don't require repeatable measuring to a tenth of a thou, then just get the same one or something similar from CT or wherever. I have had a cheapo CT purchased dial caliper for over ten years, and it works just fine for measuring CBTO or COAL type measurements. $15 for a couple of years use is dirt cheap. I send that amount of money downrange in the first ten or fifteen minutes I am out shooting.
 
Mitutoyo. Otherwise it doesn't matter what cheap piece of ^&*% you buy for around $15. It will be stamped with whomever is peddling it, but it will be made at the same place in China. If you don't require repeatable measuring to a tenth of a thou, then just get the same one or something similar from CT or wherever. I have had a cheapo CT purchased dial caliper for over ten years, and it works just fine for measuring CBTO or COAL type measurements. $15 for a couple of years use is dirt cheap. I send that amount of money downrange in the first ten or fifteen minutes I am out shooting.

You can't measure to a tenth of a thou with a caliper anyway. I'd wager most can't do it accurately and repeatability with a micrometer either.
 
I have both.... A vintage no-name dial caliper and a princess auto special. Other than the batteries in the PA digital dying just when I was about to use it, I've had no issues.

BTW, neither one is exact when compared to the 1.000" Starrett standard I have. I think it may be time to spring for a better caliper.

Yup, Starrett makes some good stuff too.
 
You can't measure to a tenth of a thou with a caliper anyway. I'd wager most can't do it accurately and repeatability with a micrometer either.
OK, although I didn't actually state caliper for my tenth of a thou, a half a thou with a good cal should be able to be done repeatedly. A tenth of a thou with a mike repeatedly and a a half to a tenth of that most of the time depending on the isntrument. Any better than that and one has to start making temperature compensation and stabilization a priority with high accuracy mikes or optical measuring. It is not required so I have no need to get involved at that level.

My statement still stands. For COAL and CBTO measurements, a cheapo caliper purchased from CT, PA, etc should be more than adequate.
 
I used to like those 15$ ones then I bought a Digital Mitutoyo ! Would never go back to cheap junk after using one. Buy once Cry once ;)
 
OK, although I didn't actually state caliper for my tenth of a thou, a half a thou with a good cal should be able to be done repeatedly. A tenth of a thou with a mike repeatedly and a a half to a tenth of that most of the time depending on the isntrument. Any better than that and one has to start making temperature compensation and stabilization a priority with high accuracy mikes or optical measuring. It is not required so I have no need to get involved at that level.

My statement still stands. For COAL and CBTO measurements, a cheapo caliper purchased from CT, PA, etc should be more than adequate.
All my digital Mitutoyo mics have calibration certificates and certificates of accuracy that state they are good to +/-.00015". That's a 3 tenths tolerance band. To accurately measure to tenths, you need a quality device that reads to at LEAST the next order of magnitude.
 
I also have a set of gauge blocks, so I can determine if there is any truth to what the caliper is telling me.
Whether I use a caliper or micrometer depends on how precise the measurement must be.
 
I'm a big fan of a 8" caliper, I have both digital and dial Mitutoyo's and the dial is always within reach.
I mostly user the digital for quick conversion of measurements.

David
 
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