Vernier caliper recommendations

SeanW

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I need to buy a decent accurate digital vernier caliper - any of the engineering types on here got a recommendation for a specific brand or product that will go a good job at a good price?
 
Mitutoyu for quality, draper for affordability
 
I am still using a Mitutoyu given to me by my Dad who had a couple of years and I had it over ten years. Sent it in for calibration once and there was nothing wrong with it :blast :D
 
Mitutoyo are nice but you get much better value for money with the Moore & Wright Value line calipers. Cost around £28 and are a really nice bit of kit. In a different league to the calipers in the same price range.

On offer here at £24 http://www.tradesmanschoice.com/catalog/Moore_Wright/MW110-15DBL.html

As mentioned above if price isn't an issue take the Mtutoyo
 
Mitutoyo :thumb2

Of course, it depends how accurate you want it to be, afterall they're just measuring sticks.
 
Country of Origin ................. China :D

Our boss bought half a dozen of those last year - they didn't see out a fortnight of continual use. Good if you want a toy for your child to play with. :D
 
Once upon a time it would always be Moore & Wright or Starrett but times change, Sheffield, and British engineering aren't what they used to be.
 
Country of Origin ................. China :D

I'm not bothered about that Nick. It's a better bit of kit than the others I have.

I have a Mitutoyo as well ;) in fact I have nearly as many Vernier calipers as I do Multimeters :D
 
Once upon a time it would always be Moore & Wright or Starrett but times change, Sheffield, and British engineering aren't what they used to be.

Both top names but Mitutoyo have been around a long long time and have proved their worth both in build quality and longevity.

You are correct British engineering isn't what it used to be, it is better! It would have to be better or else it would fold completely. As you say, times change, but so do tolerances with machined parts. They have become tighter over time , which improves reliability/durability of the working piece/s.

Admittedly we don't manufacture a great deal anymore (our own product that is) as a nation but our engineering environmental skills, tolerances, finish, volume, component quality and equipment at the higher end of the 'precision' scale is far more superior to that of years gone by.
 
I have a Mitutoyo traditional vernier caliper which I've probably used every day since I bought it in 1987. Personally I wouldn't trust anything with a digital readout both for reliability or accuracy.
 
I have a Mitutoyo traditional vernier caliper which I've probably used every day since I bought it in 1987. Personally I wouldn't trust anything with a digital readout both for reliability or accuracy.

Why :nenau
 
I use my mitutoyo digital every day, it's great for me but then i don't often need to be any more accurate than a tenth of a mm.

Its only had one problem which was fixed FOC, i must have put 20 batteries in it over the years, i never switch it off and a battery lasts more than a year easily.

Top kit!
 
as an aside, I would bother buying a digital vernier, they are no more accurate, and you just need to replace the batteries. :nenau
 
very much easier to read, especially for the casual user.

Yes I would agree.

But they aren't difficult to read with a little a bit of practice...if one dedicated an hour to learning it properly, it would be less time investment that in working an extra hour earning money to buy batteries in the long run...


...and there's a snobbish satisfaction in doing to too :thumb
 


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