MEASUREMENT]
TOOL
45
Micrometer Calipers are the direct offspring of the Whitworth measuring machine. In the original form of this machine a screw of 20 threads to the inch, turned by a worm-wheel of 200 teeth and single-threaded worm, had a wheel on the axis of the worm with 250 divisions on its circumference, so that an adjustment of 962,055 of an inch was possible. The costly measuring machines made to-day have a dividing wheel on the screw, but they combine modifications to ensure freedom from error, the fruits of prolonged experience. Good machines are made by the Whitworth, the Pratt & Whitney, the Newall (fig. 71), and the Brown & Sharpe firms. These are used for testing purposes. But there are immense numbers of small instruments, the micrometer calipers (fig. 72), made for general shop use, measuring directly to N156 of an inch, and in the pitch is 40 to the inch, and the circular divisions number 25, so that a movement of one division indicates that the screw has been advanced Qg of, fu or Ulm, of an inch. Provision for correcting or talcing up the effects of wear is included in these desi ns (e.g. at a in fig. 72), and varies with different manufacturers. ri vernier is sometimes fitted in addition, in very high class instruments, to the circular divisions, so that readings of ten thousandths of an inch can be taken. Beam micrometer calipers (fig. 7) take several inches in lpngah, the micrometer being reserved for fractional parts of the mc on y.
Depth Gauges.-It is often necessary to measure the depth of one portion of a-piece of work below another part, or the height of one portion relatively to a lower one. To hold a rule perpendicularly E and take a sight is not an accurate method, because the same objections app gl to this as to rule measurement in general. There are many dept gauges made with rule d1v1s1ons s1mply, and then these have the adqlantagekof aishouldeiged ga? which rests upon the rtion o the wor an from w ic the rule measurement
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FIG. 74.-Depth Gauges.
A g, glain roundi rod 3, sliding in head b, andl pinched viiigh screw c. ule a, gra uate into inches or metric ivisions s i in on head FIG. 72.*MlCfOm€t€f Calipers. (Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co.) ' b, in grooved head of Clamping Screw c ' g A, Frames. a, Adjusting nuts for taking up C, Slocomb depth gauge, fitted wit micrometer. a, Rod marked in B, Anvil Qrfibutment. Wear: half inches, sliding in head b; c, hub; d, thimble corresponding C. Hub dlVld€d i0Hgltl1@lH3~1iY~ lu Clamping nut. with similar divided parts in the micrometer calipers; e, clamp-D, Spindle with micrometer c, Ratchet stop, wh1ch slips under in screw. sc un e r ss sure
rew du p e ure to en g
E, Thimble, divided circularly. uniform measurement. taken mg- 74)- These § €¥1€fal1Y have 3 Clamping affaflgementhands of careful men easily to half and quarter thousandths; these cost from £1 to £I, los. only. In these the subdivision of the turns of the screw is effected by circular graduations. Usually the screw D
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d ¢ C(? a
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d
D
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FIG. 73.-Beam Micrometer Calipers. C, Abutment block with
c for fine adjustment.
Clamping screws.
A, Beam.
B, Head, adjustable by equal
inch divisions, by lines a, a, d, SCFEW
or holes b, b, and plug b' D, Micrometer. holes bushed. e, Anvil.
But for very accurate work either the vernier or the micrometer fitting is applied, so that depths can be measured in thousandths of an inch, or sometimes in sixty-fourths, or in metric subdivisions. Z a Z
d
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I
< Z, /ll Y ' ' ""' 'Wo /I
B » ffifilff FIG. 75.-Rod Gauges. A, Pratt & Whitney gau e. a, Tube split at ends; b, b, chucks clamping tube on pain rod c, and screwed end d. Rough adjustment is made on rod 0, of which several are provided; fine adjustment is by screwed end d. B, Sawyer gauge. a, Body; b, extension rods for rough adjustment, several being supplied and pinched with screw c; d, screwed end with graduated head; e, reading arm extending from body over graduations; f, clamping screw. Rod Gauges.-When internal diameters have to be taken, too large for plug gauges or calipers to span, the usual custom is to set a rod of iron or steel across, file it till it fits the bore, and then measure its len th with a rule. More accurate as well as adjustable are the rodg gauges (fig. 75) to which the vernier or the micrometer are fitted. These occur in a few varied designs. Screw Thread Gauges.-The taking of linear dimensions, though provided for so admirably by the systems of gauging just discussed, does not cover the important section of screw measurement. This is a department of the highest importance. In most English shops the only test to-day of the size of a. screw or nut is thefuse of a standard screw or nut. That there is variation in these is evidenced by the necessity for fitting nuts to bolts when large