@@robertyouart8208 At the very least, you should then work in an exactly temperature-controlled environment and only touch all parts with gloves 🙂 And should all this be the case, Mitutoyo naturally also has a solution with the MDH-25MC model 🙂
Something that makes me uneasy about this is it doesn't appear to have the old school manual graduations on the sleeve or thimble to measure it manually. On my "old" digitals, I like having two ways to measure for backup reasons but also for redundancy (I can compare the two measurement readings to see if my mic is drifting).
More and more plastic parts on your micrometers ... In our company they bought over 80 micrometers from Hartig Germany, because the analog Mitutoyos now come with plastic ratches and plastic lever...
Plastics are acceptable in metrology equipment so long as they don't affect measurements. They're resistant to many shop chemicals and cheaper to replace if they get damaged beyond usability.
@@imajeenyus42 If using an OLED display make the background black so it draws no power and have the numbers in white or a light gray. That would keep power consumption down and allow high contrast, easy to read digits.
@@kellymoses8566 I think (not 100% sure) that he meant that all sizes of micrometers should have the same display control unit MODEL (and so, the same part number for a replacement part) inside of them, so that if a module fails, there is only one single replacement part number possible (and available) no matter which micrometer model fails, in stead of every micrometer having a different one inside and you having to figure out which part number is inside the micrometer that failed. Good idea actually, though perhaps the size of the component might be an issue on very small micrometers (never opened one up, so not sure) but apart from that, I'm on board. At least, that's how I read that comment
because the metric system is being used in the US since the Metric Act from 1866 and is the preferred measurement system since 1975 when the Metric Conversion Act was passed. All imperial units are defined as a conversion of a metric unit today as well.
And inches are not real inches either, they "adjusted" the inch to be 25.400000 mm, so your "inches" are now just derived from metric mm anyway, why use them?
Being able to fill out inspection reports with a button is a nice feature.
How can it be limitless when there are clearly only three decimal places on the LCD?
It can measure every fiddlestick in the marketing dept. accurately, though.
Do you work below microns .001 mm / 25.4 = 0.00003937 in good luck if you use a micrometer
@@robertyouart8208 At the very least, you should then work in an exactly temperature-controlled environment and only touch all parts with gloves 🙂
And should all this be the case, Mitutoyo naturally also has a solution with the MDH-25MC model 🙂
Something that makes me uneasy about this is it doesn't appear to have the old school manual graduations on the sleeve or thimble to measure it manually. On my "old" digitals, I like having two ways to measure for backup reasons but also for redundancy (I can compare the two measurement readings to see if my mic is drifting).
So old school, build a fricking BLDC into that spindle and let it close itself, with push of a button
And yet they can't make a set of left-handed calipers 🤔
What is new compared to last version of quantumike with spc output?
Nice mic, but when the display flashes as a warning, what is it warning you of?
its warning you that you slammed your mic up against the part and that the reading is probably wrong...
When is this available?
More and more plastic parts on your micrometers ... In our company they bought over 80 micrometers from Hartig Germany, because the analog Mitutoyos now come with plastic ratches and plastic lever...
Meanwhile all German cars using more and more plastic on and in the engines!
I wonder when they will put a plastic crankshaft into BMW engine 😂😂😂😂
@@BMRStudio That's a general issue, worldwide
@@V8freaks Are you sure? I don't see plastic tensioners on cheap EVs built on China...
@@Ismsanmarwhat kind of tensioners are you talking about in EVs?
Plastics are acceptable in metrology equipment so long as they don't affect measurements. They're resistant to many shop chemicals and cheaper to replace if they get damaged beyond usability.
ugh i love this as QA
We still can't get backlit OLED displays? What the hell is going on with the measurement industry?
You do realise that the power consumption of a backlit OLED display might be just a tiny little bit more than an LCD?
@@imajeenyus42 If using an OLED display make the background black so it draws no power and have the numbers in white or a light gray. That would keep power consumption down and allow high contrast, easy to read digits.
Oled displays arent backlit...
@@telt100 Can we get an OLED backlit TFT eInk screen?
@@telt100 Doh, good point ;-)
Ah I just bought the old one.
Wanted: A set of different size micrometers that share a single electronic display module.
You would have to constantly swap the display between the various micrometers? That would be a waste of time. And it would get lost.
the electronic display isnt the expensive part...
@@kellymoses8566 I think (not 100% sure) that he meant that all sizes of micrometers should have the same display control unit MODEL (and so, the same part number for a replacement part) inside of them, so that if a module fails, there is only one single replacement part number possible (and available) no matter which micrometer model fails, in stead of every micrometer having a different one inside and you having to figure out which part number is inside the micrometer that failed. Good idea actually, though perhaps the size of the component might be an issue on very small micrometers (never opened one up, so not sure) but apart from that, I'm on board. At least, that's how I read that comment
Why do you show i mm and not freedoms per eagle if its aimed towards american customers
because the metric system is being used in the US since the Metric Act from 1866 and is the preferred measurement system since 1975 when the Metric Conversion Act was passed.
All imperial units are defined as a conversion of a metric unit today as well.
And inches are not real inches either, they "adjusted" the inch to be 25.400000 mm, so your "inches" are now just derived from metric mm anyway, why use them?
freedoms per eagle 😂😂😂
Costumers make costumes and don't use micrometers
Freedoms per eagle 💀💀
アメリカ人にはメートル法は難易度が高そうやな
あいつらほんまヤード・ポンド法が好きやな
No. I use both. Micrometers have a button to switch between millimeters and inches.
I’m an American home shop machinist and will use metric whenever I can. Do all my CAD in metric.
I use whichever units the drawing is in. I use both just fine. I prefer metric, though.
I can't go back to 0.5mm pitch micrometer after I used this thing.