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91 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
91 lines
7.9 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3534
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Title: HPR3534: Vernier caliper
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3534/hpr3534.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 01:04:17
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---
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This is Haka Public Radio episode 3534 for first ever 17th of February 2022, today's show
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is entitled Burnier Caliper, it is hosted by Ken Fallon and is about 1 minute long and
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carries a clean flag. The summary is, Ken recommends my Reducesful dual formettering stuff.
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Hi everybody, my name is Ken Fallon and you're listening to another episode of Haka Public Radio.
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Today is a show that I wanted to do for some time but I was prompted to do it for two reasons, one
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that were short of shows and I wanted to get this message out to you so if you haven't submitted
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a show this year, please consider doing that immediately. If you have never submitted a show,
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then please consider introducing yourself to the community. Okay, the reason I'm bringing this up
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now, the other reason that I'm bringing this up now is that I was on a video call yesterday and
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somebody noticed this in the background and I realized I had wanted to do a show about this for a
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long time and it is the Burnier Calipers. What's a Burnier Calipers you asked? Well, it's actually a
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tool used for measuring stuff that's along the short of it. I came across this for the first time
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in my first year of engineering and if you don't have one, it's very, very useful thing to have.
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Let me just describe it for you. It composes of two parts. The first part
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is a piece of metal in the shape of a T. There's a long edge on the left hand side of the top
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of the T with a chamfer to a point and there's a short edge on the right hand side with a chamfer
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to a point or you could say on the bottom there's a long edge and then top there's a long edge.
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Then inside of that sliding up and down the along base about 30 centimeters or a foot,
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no actually it's 15 centimeters or a foot, a half a foot, then there is a slider and my one,
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the slider has 0 to 9, 0 to 10 actually and 0 to 25 of 0.001 inches. So the top is imperial
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and the bottom is metric. You can get various different ones, you can even get digital ones or
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ones with a dial on them but I have like an ultimate cheapy. So what this thing does is it allows
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you to measure various different dimensions of a component and I've seen people use the scrape
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a bit for that when you get a dimension so you set it as accurately as one centimeter then you can
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scrape off a line, a mark. I was always thrown upon that you shouldn't do that but it seems to be
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a fairly standard thing and this thing I picked up for less than a tenor and you can get cheaper ones
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made of plastic that actually work out that seem to be quite well good as well. So when you open
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it out not only does the slider slide along the measurement you know but a metal pin sticks out
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the bottom and the reason for that is you can get three different types of dimensions. So if we go
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through the Wikipedia article which I recommend you reading we have the first part is the outside
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jaws and these are used to measure external diameters of an object like for example the outside
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of a cylinder or the width of an object like a rod or something like that or if you just wanted to
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say well I want to have three centimeters there a market and then you can scrape your mark along.
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Then we have the inside jaws where it goes inside the object itself and you can measure the
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internal diameter so you would use the outside one to measure maybe the outside of a pipe
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and you would use these inside ones to measure the inside of a pipe very very useful thing
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and then the depth probe or rod is used to measure the depth of an object so if there was a pipe for
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instance you would you could drop that inside the pipe rested on the top and the rod would go down
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to the ground for example and you would be able to measure that there and mine has also a little
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screw at the top that you can use for lucky I got I have a digital one that was more expensive
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but it invariably runs out of batteries whenever I want to use it and this one I got real cheap
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and it's up in the back it's got a sticker with the conversion from millimeters to widthwork
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and various different types of thread but so basically if you just use it as a regular old bog
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standard rule you know if you're doing woodwork or something like that it's just absolutely fine
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if you're doing the tiniest little bit of metalwork or something you want to take a screw and
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or a nail or something and find out well is what is the exact dimension there's a really
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cool aspect of this that you can do and that is you can get accuracies to 0.1 of a millimeter
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or the equivalent in in Imperial and how you do that is as you grasp something on the jaw so I'm
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just going to pick up here and I got graphs on the outer jaws and I see a pencil it is a
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big viral so I'm grasping that in the outer jaws and I see that the zero on the scale so it lines
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up with the one two three so sorry it is five centimeters six centimeters seven centimeters so it's
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more than seven centimeters but less than eight centimeters so we know it's seven points something
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now and we can tell that because that's where the first zero on the sliding scale is
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but the first the sliding scale doesn't line up with the scale on the vernier calipers itself
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no it doesn't it's offset slightly so that as you look along that line and you see where the
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markings line up with the numbers on the sliding scale you will see that you can get your second
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point measurement so I've already said this is five six seven points something and I look along and
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I see this the one on the sliding scale kind of is somewhere between the 12 and the 13 now that's
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not what I'm looking for the two is getting very close to 15 670 the three is not quite over the
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22 and the 22 doesn't matter all you're doing is you're looking to see where the bottom line
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marks up with any of the centimeter lines and I see that five marks up with one of the centimeter
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lines perfectly so I can say with relative degree of confidence that this is 7.5 is the dimension
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outside dimension of this and it's knuckle that's close enough for jazz close enough for basically
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close enough for jazz it's a really really useful tool to have you would be amazed at how often
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you would use it for example I want quickly measure a piece of perspex over here I measure it
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and I see that it is more or less four and even then having a sliding one with imperial
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is quite useful as well because you can see if the thread that you're working on if it's not
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really fitting nicely into a metric system which is used commonly over here then you can see
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that oh this could be an imperial thread and there's a a standard imperial or a withword thread
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that I can use so very very useful I highly recommend if you do anything around the housey but
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you know it's a very useful thing to do I was the other day measuring up I needed a little plastic
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for a window and it was just handy to be able to get in there with the inside jaws and in the gap
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and measure how much of a gap is is there in real terms so that was my tip for near calipers
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if you don't have them have a look see if you can get one you can get the plastic ones which are
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I don't know if they call them plastic or they carbon fiber reinforce something but they seem
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to be also under five dollars something like that I've seen I've seen a big clive do a breakdown
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on them and they seemed to be reading off the scale so that a new positionally where it was
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on the thing so that's it's tuned in tomorrow for another exciting episode of hacker public
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radio you've been listening to hacker public radio at hackerpublicradio.org today's show was
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contributed by an hbr listener like yourself if you ever thought of recording a podcast then click
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on our contributing to find out how easy it really is hosting for hbr this kindly provided by
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an honesthost.com the internet archive and our sync.net unless otherwise stated today's show
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