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If I was in Puerto Vallarta I would be in the bay of Banderas fishing for dorado, marlin, snapper and more and never get any model work done.the other in Puerto Vallarta
If I was in Puerto Vallarta I would be in the bay of Banderas fishing for dorado, marlin, snapper and more and never get any model work done.
One tool I can't live without......my library of reference books. I don't read these books for pleasure like a novel, but I do use them as much or more than any tool in the shop.
Allan
Hi, not wishing to be pedantic. I think, technically it is a “Vernier”.When I started out on my Syren build I wanted to be as accurate as possible in the general construction. I purchased a caliper to help with the accuracy I wanted but also found, more and more, that I was using the scaled readout by switching between fraction inches, decimal inches and mm. I found it helped since the kit was designed in the imperial system and I am used to primarily working in mm. It is a fast way to convert between scales and again it satisfied my need for personal accuracy.
As I progressed with the build I found myself changing out the kit wood to pear and AYC because I preferred working with it rather than the basswood. That meant obtaining billets of the replacement wood, milling, cutting and sanding to various sizes and checking constantly for repeat accuracy. Further build progression saw me scratch build more and more parts, including brass work, and discarding kit supplied wood and fittings. I did that to learn new skills and most importantly because I was enjoying challenging myself. The smaller the replacements became the more I needed and used the caliper. So much so it is beside me on the workbench constantly.
Initially this “tool” was a “nice to have”. Now it has become a necessary “cannot do without”.
(Edit: changed word micrometer to caliper - thanks Phil @Philski)
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My luck seems to be the one tool I can't do without, was the one dropped on the floor and rolled under some benchwork never to be see again, as you didn't know when you last used and dropped it!After following this for a while I've come to the conclusion that "The one tool you can't do without is the one your currently using for the task at hand". Until you stumble across something better. Thanks for the many (low cost and no so low cost) suggestions.
As far as I understand it, the term vernier relates to the printed scale itself on the caliper (6 or 7 in Rick's image). A digital caliper doesn't have the scale thus it wouldn't be as accurate to call it a vernier caliper.As an old millwright (fitter/turner to those Antipodeans and Poms) and not wishing to be pedantic but the correct term is vernier calliper. I still have an old school version which relied on much better eyesight to read than the modern LCD readout. I might add the LCD versions are a much better option to the aged such as most of us in this forum.
https://www.bing.com/ck/a?!&&p=6740...S5jb20vYmlvZ3JhcGh5L1BpZXJyZS1WZXJuaWVy&ntb=1
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