@@DenverLoveless .01 mm = 0.0003937008 in (so if you are rounding up, you would be losing that precision) This is similar to comparing precision of Celsius vs. Fahrenheit markings on the same thermometer. These are just different scale measurements.
I am an engineer and have been reading mic's for years. You have made this task much easier for many I would assume, especially in this digital age where most digital callipers are not as accurate as micrometers. First class video.
FINALLY. Someone who actually teaches and explains. Nobody else actually learns you how, not even the manufacturers. They just kinda throw about 1/4 of what you need in your general vicinity. THANK YOU SIR
I'm a CNC milling machine operator, I'm new to having to read micrometers you have made this seem rather simple. Hopefully now I won't be a ball of confusion when trying to measure my parts 🤞🏽 Thankyou!
I used to work for a subsidiary company of McDonald Douglas in the early 70s as Machinist I machine parts for the DC-10 you don't know what pressure is until you have an FAA inspector working alongside you I changed careers became a finish Carpenter now I'm retired thanks for this refresher course it will help me when I start to rebuild my off-road trucks engines
Thank you very much. I loved my father may he rest in peace (who was a machinest) so much that I wanted to work with him all day. In high school I took metal shop and I worked my way thru college for 6 years. I always had a hard time with micrometers. You explained it very nicely. I still have his tool chest from 70 years ago and all of his tools say "made in America".
I was never taught how to read a micrometer and these HF models don't come with any instructions so your video was extremely helpful. Clear and concise with good examples. Thank you for making this!
This was a remarkably clear and concise explanation. For what ever reason, my nervous self had frequent brain farts using this at my A&P school and the teachers were not often clear on how to use them. A very helpful video to reference for my refresher course before my United Airlines interview the other day. Excellent work.
Well done, I just stumbled on this and decided to do a refresher ( it’s been 50 years since I read one) you had me organized immediately, nice clear concise instructions.
Thank you so much Stuart, I could have used this a week ago while starting a new job. My "trainer" gave me 30 seconds of training and said go for it and left me WAY confused. I know I'm better off now.
Old Tool and die maker tip: On the small 0-1”, 1”-2” Mike I am right handed so I take my 0-1” in my right palm and loop my pinky finger around the frame of the mic. Now a have I positive grip with my pinky my thumb and index finger to spin the barrel for an accurate measurement and you never slip and drop your expensive mic.
I'm a metric guy from the UK but I recently got and old (1950s) American truck and of course all the critical engine dimensions are in Imperial. So this video was spectacularly useful! As I had no clue how to read an imperial mic. Now I do. So easy to follow and understand. Thank you
Appreciate it brother! Goin back into CNC milling & lathe work tomorrow morning after 25 years of automotive technician repair. I've done this work before about 22 years ago so i really needed a refreshers course on the micrometer readings again. 10:36 minute mark was all i needed. This brings back even the metric memory stuff. Thanks a ton friend. Greatly appreciate these important videos!!
This is opening up a whole new world to me and is making me appreciate my grandfather more being that he was a master machinist and had many calipers like these laying around his shop
I'm glad you got something out of it. My grandfather also worked with machine tools, but unfortunately I didn't find that out until close to the end of his life. I always knew him as this grumpy guy who talked about jazz and the war all the time. It wasn't until I got a job as a machinist that he talked about his time at the power company doing maintenance machining. He had been retired my entire life, so I had never even thought about what he had done for a living. At least he and I got to share a little shop talk there at the end. Thanks for watching!
Thank you. I recently got a promotion into bearing inspection. I was really apprehensive but told, it's no big deal... we'll teach you what you need to know. So I took the job but they didn't really teach me how to read the mics properly and I fumble on my own. This video will help.
A Huge thankyou for posting this video, i have a test coming up on motor mechanics, i found the way i have been taught to use these very confusing, you have made it very clear. credit to you
Thank you so very much for imparting this knowledge. Your method is so much simpler. One can only imagine how difficult the FAA General aircraft mechanic knowledge guide can be... Given the FAA wrote the material. A mystery solved.
Thank you for posting this video. I'm in an intro to Ag mechanics class and have to be able to read this for test purposes. You explained this a little better than my current teacher. Thanks again!
Excellent video. Pointing at scale with the pencil as you explained made it easier for me to understand. Some of the other videos just turn the thimble and talk. If your new to reading a micrometer it harder to understand. Nice job, now I understand. Thanks
@@StuartdeHaro I am so happy for your video, because without it I would of been done. I really appreciate it. It went very well, 3 hours of roasting, but I feel confident about it.
I love this video! Going to school to be a welder but have a class in the damn machine shop! Sold the 1955 Atlas lathe but kept the measuring tools,just never needed to learn to read mikes until now. EZ PZ My instructor might be slightly impressed! Thank You!!
What memories! I worked tool & die 40+ years ago. From corvette dashboards, to plastic hip sockets and stainless steel backbones, to CNC fighter jet hydraulic blocks. Fond memories.
Thank for the video. I had a class about that yesterday and couldn't figure out how to read this and I have a test about it today and after watching your video I am quite confidente.
I never read a micrometer in my life. But I'm planning on buying a lathe. this video was in the recommended area. and I found it very informative. Thanks for the video.
Thank you for the tutorial,it was easily understandable and your video was also done with care so that viewers can easily see the small readings you were explaining.Thankyou again for your effort and time.
I first learned how to read a micrometer in a junior high school shop class in 1962. For me, it was easier to remember that all readings are in 1/10,000ths of an inch. To use the instructor's first example: 0.5 in = 0.5000 in [500 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places) 0.009 in = 0.0090 in [90 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places) 0.0005 in = 0.0005 in [5 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places) TOTAL: 0.5095 in = 0.5095 in [5,095 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places)
Awesome explanation Stuart, I have been watching a lot of this type of videos. Your explanation is the best I have seen. Finally understand my micrometer. Thanks!
thank you man! at first I hated the inch micrometers because I couldn't understand it and the professor didn't help that much. NOW it's a piece of cake for me because of you. THANK YOU!
Great video. Just ordered a micrometer. Been realizing I needed one in my shop. They are definitely handy to have. My first job was at an automotive machine shop. I use to use them all the time. But that was 20 years ago. Kinda forgot how to do it. One watch of your video, it all came back to me. Keep up the excellent work man.
Thank you for the course on reading a micrometer. I'm getting into a detailed engine rebuild of a small engine and this is invaluable to make sure I order the correct piston. Thank you!
The metric system is ABSOLUTELY 💯% better than the English system. I can't believe the SAE system is so inferior, it's hard to believe it has held the upper hand for this long......
@@louf7178 It needs less decimal placings because it's a fraction of a mm which is smaller than the same decimal placed fraction of an inch🤦♂️.. I.e you can measure to the thousandth of a mm if you chose but it is much smaller than .001" which is equal to 0.0254mm which you'd round to 0.025mm as 0.0004mm is .000015748" which is a scale you'd never measure down to in inches anyway. Metric system doesn't "seem" more logical, it is... Just like freezing point is 0°c, boiling point is 100°c, logical. Unlike that Fahrenheit garbage, inch, pound, gallon nonsense
Thank you for this! I tried to learn this years ago, for metal shop, but couldn't grasp it then. Of course, the micrometer was different, but it just wasn't taught very well. This made perfect sense to me
Thank you! I was trying to learn this from a text book! This video turned mud into water... As in my muddled mind received clarity, yay! I so know how to use one of these now!
Yes this engineering/science and metallurgy. Pursuit has been challenging. It's good to have help I'm a machinest. And a welder. Precision work is a must. Trigonometry and geometry and Algebra are all the tools of the trade in our scientific brains. It's a life.long pursuit.
As a lifelong CNC Machinist and supervisor, I've had to teach this to young trainees a gazillion times...they're lucky if they can grasp the math involved. Reading the mic is only half the battle! Applying the math will lose quite a few. Good explanation, wish they had this kinda video years ago.
Wow thank you so much. My new job requires to use these and I had no idea how to use. I'm sure they'll be asking if I'm familiar and now I'm much more comfortable with my answer. I'll watch again tomorrow to keep refreshing myself.
Very good in years of Millwright work I can honestly say that was the best explanation of the veneer line. You have no idea how many gifts millwrights will not carry out to .1000 this can be an issue. Sweating hubs really comes to mind.
Very good video. Learned how to read them back in high school but when you don’t use them since then well…… Thanks for sharing some experience. Much appreciated!
Institutionalis3d teachers suck, I really think they only hire real shifty teachers to prevent people from advancing g, cause the fancy I situations are have broke the taxpayers back. Indirect gatekeeping
Congrats. This is the best I have seen in 3 years. I have them all, likes the digimatic, amazingly accurate and fast to read, especially good enough for comparison. At least you show a real close up. Never understood how people explain something which is hard to see. I subscribed and looking forward to see more from you. Thanks
No relation or any other connection that I’ll watch his stuff and he commented on some of mine. I have no equipment or editing ability as Tony has. Most likely I am twice of his age so I can show lots of old but some unknown by most people. I need time , energy and room to work. Your clear and precise explanation for important detail is appreciated. I have a mech. And a civil eng. but I am neither of them. I grew up in a steel shop of my gpa, learned the trade and became a structural engineer in steel structures only. Tony is toooo precise for me but producing enjoyable shows. Thanks again
This is the best explanation to date that was easy to follow! Thanks. I had a measurements in MM for engine shim buckets, and the way I was reading it wasn't getting me close to the converted IN measurements I was getting with my Micrometer. Very frustrating, after I saw this video I got much closer. The bucket shim (when new) said it was supposed to be 4.80 mm, and after measuring it I got 0.1883 in or 4.78282 mm which is very close and could be accurate because of the wear on the part. All these other videos get into screw thread ratios and twists, good god... No one needs to know all that background stuff in order to read it. Now If I was a trying to reverse engineer the micrometer...then that would be nice to know.
Nice video with good camera work and narration. My Mitutoyo metric mic (0.001) will read to 1/1000th of a millimeter with its vernier scale. We're actually measuring individual microns! It's cool to see a 1µm or 2µm difference in a job.
Great video! Im from the uk, i was taught the Metric system in school, but my workplace does the majority of there work for the states so the Imperial system has become second nature to me and my prefered method. My vast collection of analog measuring tools are all imperial, with the exception of one which is a 0-25mm Mic still in its plastic wrapper brand new from +10 years ago
I went to CNC school in 2012 and am just now wanting to find work doing it. This was very helpful and I was able to pick this back up almost instantly. Most places want experience but the school I was at didn't find me a job like they were supposed to and switched teachers on us 3 times. They also let us out early all the time. Kind of why I'm mad I still have to pay them back.
Nice! I explain it a bit different. MONEY! Every .100" is a dollar. It takes 4 quarters to make a dollar. Anything in between the quarters is pennies. Add em up! Dollars, quarters, and pennies. Beyond that use the vernier scale for tenths.
I truly cannot thank you enough for the simple explanation of how to read these. I was completely not confident on how to read them and now I feel very confident!
Thanks Stu, I only use imperial or digital mics. I haven't used a metric, but I feel I get the idea now. It's odd how the scales are used differently, I guess because MM are just such smaller increments than inches. Thanks for clearing that up...I guess this is why you're a teacher!
11:40 Metric reading
Bless🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Fish
THANKS
THANKS x2
@@DenverLoveless .01 mm = 0.0003937008 in (so if you are rounding up, you would be losing that precision) This is similar to comparing precision of Celsius vs. Fahrenheit markings on the same thermometer. These are just different scale measurements.
I am 60 years. Still learning. No time limits to learn. Learning things our whole life.
had to learn this for gunsmithing im23. thank god micrometers make reading weapon schematics easier.
❤ ضرر ش
I am an engineer and have been reading mic's for years. You have made this task much easier for many I would assume, especially in this digital age where most digital callipers are not as accurate as micrometers. First class video.
@@macbrick66 mechanical engineer and not using micrometer????
@@preetamyadav7952 where do you see the "mechanical " in his statement, dickhead!
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_engineering_branches
@@mrbillgoode It is better to be dickhead than shagging balls .
@@preetamyadav7952 You're a clinical moron
FINALLY. Someone who actually teaches and explains. Nobody else actually learns you how, not even the manufacturers. They just kinda throw about 1/4 of what you need in your general vicinity. THANK YOU SIR
Good video... Cleared it right up for me.
I'm a CNC milling machine operator, I'm new to having to read micrometers you have made this seem rather simple. Hopefully now I won't be a ball of confusion when trying to measure my parts 🤞🏽 Thankyou!
I'm glad it helped. Feel free to ask me any questions you have. I'm happy to help.
FACTS
What’s a cinc?
@@joecamacho21 th-cam.com/video/L8F0K5JF5fY/w-d-xo.html
A CNC is a computer numerical control machine
You “DEFINITELY” and example of a good teacher … breaking everything down in more simpler way!!!! Thank you Sir 👌💯
I used to work for a subsidiary company of McDonald Douglas in the early 70s as Machinist I machine parts for the DC-10 you don't know what pressure is until you have an FAA inspector working alongside you I changed careers became a finish Carpenter now I'm retired thanks for this refresher course it will help me when I start to rebuild my off-road trucks engines
Thank you very much. I loved my father may he rest in peace (who was a machinest) so much that I wanted to work with him all day. In high school I took metal shop and
I worked my way thru college for 6 years. I always had a hard time with micrometers. You explained it very nicely. I still have his tool chest from 70 years ago and all of his tools say "made in America".
Excellently done, finally someone who can explain the readings, tenths , thousands, ten thousands.. Thx very much
I was never taught how to read a micrometer and these HF models don't come with any instructions so your video was extremely helpful. Clear and concise with good examples. Thank you for making this!
This was a remarkably clear and concise explanation. For what ever reason, my nervous self had frequent brain farts using this at my A&P school and the teachers were not often clear on how to use them.
A very helpful video to reference for my refresher course before my United Airlines interview the other day. Excellent work.
I'm glad it helped. Good luck!
I’m here cause I had a UA interview and forgot how to read a micrometer. Gonna go back and take a retest.
What job at United Airlines requires you to know how to use a micrometer? Just curious
@Roberto Garcia Tech Ops or backstop jobs. If you work on landing gear or engine overhauls you definitely will be using micrometers.
Well done, I just stumbled on this and decided to do a refresher ( it’s been 50 years since I read one) you had me organized immediately, nice clear concise instructions.
Thank you so much Stuart, I could have used this a week ago while starting a new job. My "trainer" gave me 30 seconds of training and said go for it and left me WAY confused. I know I'm better off now.
I'm glad it helped. Congrats on the new job!
Old Tool and die maker tip: On the small 0-1”, 1”-2” Mike I am right handed so I take my 0-1” in my right palm and loop my pinky finger around the frame of the mic. Now a have I positive grip with my pinky my thumb and index finger to spin the barrel for an accurate measurement and you never slip and drop your expensive mic.
Thank you for subscription and for my studying for my successful in my job
A simple 16 min video taught me more than my professor, ain’t that some shit haha
@@benjaminhollingsworth3094 Eh, let's not to that far.
Word man. I feel the same way.
same here, I was learning through online quizzes for my college and I could not learn crap from the robots talking.
same
@@shawnmendrek3544 147 people?! That’s like the entire population!
I'm in college right now and right now i have learned more from you than i ever did in class. THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!
th-cam.com/video/YOk0FRQlc3c/w-d-xo.html
I'm a metric guy from the UK but I recently got and old (1950s) American truck and of course all the critical engine dimensions are in Imperial. So this video was spectacularly useful! As I had no clue how to read an imperial mic. Now I do. So easy to follow and understand. Thank you
You're very welcome. Thanks for watching!
I HAVE USED ONE A LITTLE BUT NEVER HAD ANY ONE EXPLAIN HOW AND WHY NOW IT MAKES SENSE. THANK YOU FOR SHARING.
Uhdo
Appreciate it brother! Goin back into CNC milling & lathe work tomorrow morning after 25 years of automotive technician repair. I've done this work before about 22 years ago so i really needed a refreshers course on the micrometer readings again. 10:36 minute mark was all i needed. This brings back even the metric memory stuff. Thanks a ton friend. Greatly appreciate these important videos!!
I'm glad it helped. Good luck with the new job!
The best explanation I have ever seen on how to read Inch micrometers.
This is opening up a whole new world to me and is making me appreciate my grandfather more being that he was a master machinist and had many calipers like these laying around his shop
I'm glad you got something out of it. My grandfather also worked with machine tools, but unfortunately I didn't find that out until close to the end of his life. I always knew him as this grumpy guy who talked about jazz and the war all the time. It wasn't until I got a job as a machinist that he talked about his time at the power company doing maintenance machining. He had been retired my entire life, so I had never even thought about what he had done for a living. At least he and I got to share a little shop talk there at the end. Thanks for watching!
Stuart de Haro You’re Welcome. I’m glad you got to talk with yours about this kind of stuff. Mine passed away when I was 8
Thank you. I recently got a promotion into bearing inspection. I was really apprehensive but told, it's no big deal... we'll teach you what you need to know. So I took the job but they didn't really teach me how to read the mics properly and I fumble on my own. This video will help.
Congrats on the promotion. Good luck!
A Huge thankyou for posting this video, i have a test coming up on motor mechanics, i found the way i have been taught to use these very confusing, you have made it very clear. credit to you
I'm in my 50s, and I've finally learned how to read micrometers. Thanks!
Thank you so very much for imparting this knowledge. Your method is so much simpler. One can only imagine how difficult the FAA General aircraft mechanic knowledge guide can be... Given the FAA wrote the material. A mystery solved.
I found this immeasurably helpful ! Precision quality video, on a scale of its own right down to the finite detail, sir !
Thank you for posting this video. I'm in an intro to Ag mechanics class and have to be able to read this for test purposes. You explained this a little better than my current teacher. Thanks again!
I'm glad it helped. Thanks for watching!
Excellent video. Pointing at scale with the pencil as you explained made it easier for me to understand. Some of the other videos just turn the thimble and talk. If your new to reading a micrometer it harder to understand. Nice job, now I understand.
Thanks
Got a job interview and test tomorrow, not sure what to expect and this video made a simple and informative refresher ! Thank you!
Good luck! Let me know how it goes.
@@StuartdeHaro I am so happy for your video, because without it I would of been done. I really appreciate it. It went very well, 3 hours of roasting, but I feel confident about it.
@@dealerofburningsalt3649 Awesome. Good to hear.
I love this video! Going to school to be a welder but have a class in the damn machine shop!
Sold the 1955 Atlas lathe but kept the measuring tools,just never needed to learn to read mikes until now. EZ PZ
My instructor might be slightly impressed! Thank You!!
@Joshua Carvalho I kept all the mikes and the larger frames. Most are just one inch I found out.
What memories! I worked tool & die 40+ years ago. From corvette dashboards, to plastic hip sockets and stainless steel backbones, to CNC fighter jet hydraulic blocks. Fond memories.
Thank for the video. I had a class about that yesterday and couldn't figure out how to read this and I have a test about it today and after watching your video I am quite confidente.
I'm glad it helped. Good luck on your test!
I never read a micrometer in my life. But I'm planning on buying a lathe. this video was in the recommended area. and I found it very informative. Thanks for the video.
I'm glad it helped. Good luck with the new lathe!
Thank you for the tutorial,it was easily understandable and your video was also done with care so that viewers can easily see the small readings you were explaining.Thankyou again for your effort and time.
I first learned how to read a micrometer in a junior high school shop class in 1962. For me, it was easier to remember that all readings are in 1/10,000ths of an inch. To use the instructor's first example:
0.5 in = 0.5000 in [500 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places)
0.009 in = 0.0090 in [90 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places)
0.0005 in = 0.0005 in [5 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places)
TOTAL: 0.5095 in = 0.5095 in [5,095 ten thousandths] (4 decimal places)
Perfect explanation!
You really made reading micrometer simple.
Excellent instruction for my wife and I.
Thank you Stuart.
I'm starting a new job after not handling a Mic in over 40 years. Thanks for the refresher. I have never worked with mm.
Good luck on the new job! Thanks for watching!
Awesome explanation Stuart, I have been watching a lot of this type of videos. Your explanation is the best I have seen. Finally understand my micrometer. Thanks!
thank you man! at first I hated the inch micrometers because I couldn't understand it and the professor didn't help that much. NOW it's a piece of cake for me because of you.
THANK YOU!
Glad it helped! Thanks for watching!
Thank you. You are/were a great teacher and I am sure you sent a lot of people into the work world with excellent skills.
Thank you very much. I'm glad you got something out of the video!
Getting a job that involves these. Thank you for explaining this, it makes alot of sense.
Great video. Just ordered a micrometer. Been realizing I needed one in my shop. They are definitely handy to have. My first job was at an automotive machine shop. I use to use them all the time. But that was 20 years ago. Kinda forgot how to do it. One watch of your video, it all came back to me. Keep up the excellent work man.
Thank you for the course on reading a micrometer. I'm getting into a detailed engine rebuild of a small engine and this is invaluable to make sure I order the correct piston. Thank you!
Let's all have a round of applause for how much simpler and logical the metric system is to use.
The metric system is ABSOLUTELY 💯% better than the English system. I can't believe the SAE system is so inferior, it's hard to believe it has held the upper hand for this long......
Mind you, the metric mic only had 3 significant digits. That's why this _seemed_ "so much more logical".
@@louf7178 It needs less decimal placings because it's a fraction of a mm which is smaller than the same decimal placed fraction of an inch🤦♂️..
I.e you can measure to the thousandth of a mm if you chose but it is much smaller than .001" which is equal to 0.0254mm which you'd round to 0.025mm as 0.0004mm is .000015748" which is a scale you'd never measure down to in inches anyway.
Metric system doesn't "seem" more logical, it is...
Just like freezing point is 0°c, boiling point is 100°c, logical. Unlike that Fahrenheit garbage, inch, pound, gallon nonsense
“Duh metric is easier because I don’t have to do my maffs in me head”
@@thomasb-k4104 more about just having to remember one value instead of 5.
Doing a micrometer reading test for school, this was the perfect refresher! Thank you!
Good luck!
Thank you for this! I tried to learn this years ago, for metal shop, but couldn't grasp it then. Of course, the micrometer was different, but it just wasn't taught very well. This made perfect sense to me
Thank you! I was trying to learn this from a text book! This video turned mud into water... As in my muddled mind received clarity, yay! I so know how to use one of these now!
Yes this engineering/science and metallurgy. Pursuit has been challenging. It's good to have help
I'm a machinest. And a welder. Precision work is a must.
Trigonometry and geometry and Algebra are all the tools of the trade in our scientific brains.
It's a life.long pursuit.
Watch this couples times a month to brush up, don't get to use these daily, very helpful in my Mercury outboard restorations, keeping all in spec.
I took this class in advanced manufacturing we had a quiz on how to use one of these this was very helpful!
I'm glad it helped. Thanks for watching!
Perfect. Needed a good measurement and got my dad’s old mics out. Got it figured out first time through. Thanks for posting
As a lifelong CNC Machinist and supervisor, I've had to teach this to young trainees a gazillion times...they're lucky if they can grasp the math involved. Reading the mic is only half the battle! Applying the math will lose quite a few. Good explanation, wish they had this kinda video years ago.
Wow thank you so much. My new job requires to use these and I had no idea how to use. I'm sure they'll be asking if I'm familiar and now I'm much more comfortable with my answer. I'll watch again tomorrow to keep refreshing myself.
Very good in years of Millwright work I can honestly say that was the best explanation of the veneer line. You have no idea how many gifts millwrights will not carry out to .1000 this can be an issue. Sweating hubs really comes to mind.
I always wanted to figure out how to read micrometers. You make it so easy to learn.
I can see why you'll struggle to read it with those shades you have on.
Thanks so much. I thought I’d watch as a refresher, then discovered how much I didn’t know / had forgotten.
Profesor in my school cant teach like this, even explain well, but this video more on explanation,you will get it! Love it..
Excellent and clear explanation - saw a metric mic for the first time and was scratching my head...
This is the best I've ever seen so far about reading micrometer. Thank you 😊
Awesome explanation I can't believe how hard I made this for myself, actually rather simple Lol
Freaking seriously. Once he added the 5 to .509. I was like WHAT? ITS THAT SIMPLE?
I had a hard time in high school reading them but now I can read them
I just took a masterclass!
I feel i earned a diploma!
Great video!
First video I clicked when I looked up "how to read micrometers". Very great video!! Definitely explained it easily enough to understand it!
Very good video. Learned how to read them back in high school but when you don’t use them since then well…… Thanks for sharing some experience. Much appreciated!
When you have to come to this video because your teacher doesn't teach like this. 👍
Don’t think this is that hard to teach. Not rocket science.
Institutionalis3d teachers suck, I really think they only hire real shifty teachers to prevent people from advancing g, cause the fancy I situations are have broke the taxpayers back. Indirect gatekeeping
The best explanation I've seen on micrometers,thank you.
Thank you for this really helpful video, please post more useful cool videos, Bless 😇
Excellent explanation. Always wanted to know how to read a micrometer correctly. Thankyou, regards from 🇦🇺
👍🏻👌🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Dude,...my production professor made it sound like opening a puzzle box! You made it so simple..Thank You!!
Wow it’s funny how I assumed I had it right and was instantly corrected, great teacher 🙌💯
Slightly more precise than my 25 ft tape measure... Great instruction on reading a mic. Thanks for posting!
Congrats. This is the best I have seen in 3 years. I have them all, likes the digimatic, amazingly accurate and fast to read, especially good enough for comparison. At least you show a real close up. Never understood how people explain something which is hard to see.
I subscribed and looking forward to see more from you. Thanks
Thanks for watching and I'm glad you liked the video! Out of curiosity, are you any relation to This Old Tony?
No relation or any other connection that I’ll watch his stuff and he commented on some of mine. I have no equipment or editing ability as Tony has. Most likely I am twice of his age so I can show lots of old but some unknown by most people. I need time , energy and room to work. Your clear and precise explanation for important detail is appreciated. I have a mech. And a civil eng. but I am neither of them. I grew up in a steel shop of my gpa, learned the trade and became a structural engineer in steel structures only. Tony is toooo precise for me but producing enjoyable shows. Thanks again
I've been going through your videos this morning. I like your style.
Thank you, i'm just learning automotive technology and this is had me confused.
Wow you are a legend. Thanks a bunch for posting this straight-forward tutorial.
This is the best explanation to date that was easy to follow! Thanks. I had a measurements in MM for engine shim buckets, and the way I was reading it wasn't getting me close to the converted IN measurements I was getting with my Micrometer. Very frustrating, after I saw this video I got much closer. The bucket shim (when new) said it was supposed to be 4.80 mm, and after measuring it I got 0.1883 in or 4.78282 mm which is very close and could be accurate because of the wear on the part. All these other videos get into screw thread ratios and twists, good god... No one needs to know all that background stuff in order to read it. Now If I was a trying to reverse engineer the micrometer...then that would be nice to know.
This video helped me understand so much better than my teacher could. Thank you for creating this!
Been using digital only, was never shown how to read these guys. Very informative video, thanks for sharing!
Nice video with good camera work and narration. My Mitutoyo metric mic (0.001) will read to 1/1000th of a millimeter with its vernier scale. We're actually measuring individual microns! It's cool to see a 1µm or 2µm difference in a job.
This was a really helpful video. You broke it down and made it simple, now I feel far more confident in measuring my bearings! Thanks!
Glad to help. Good luck!
Great video!
Im from the uk, i was taught the Metric system in school, but my workplace does the majority of there work for the states so the Imperial system has become second nature to me and my prefered method.
My vast collection of analog measuring tools are all imperial, with the exception of one which is a 0-25mm Mic still in its plastic wrapper brand new from +10 years ago
great video! i've been struggling to understand how to use a metric micrometre and this was so helpful
Super helpful, i appreciate this so much as I forgot how to read inch micro, and I have my inspection test coming tomorrow
I'm glad it helped. Good luck on the test!
I went to CNC school in 2012 and am just now wanting to find work doing it. This was very helpful and I was able to pick this back up almost instantly. Most places want experience but the school I was at didn't find me a job like they were supposed to and switched teachers on us 3 times. They also let us out early all the time. Kind of why I'm mad I still have to pay them back.
Manic Murph where did you go?
@@saintlouis1087 a place called Polaris career center in middleburg heights, a suburb of Cleveland.
Thank you so much for explaining how to read the measurements so clearly. Great video!!
Nice! I explain it a bit different. MONEY! Every .100" is a dollar. It takes 4 quarters to make a dollar. Anything in between the quarters is pennies. Add em up! Dollars, quarters, and pennies. Beyond that use the vernier scale for tenths.
Great job. I really appreciate you taking your time to explain this application.
Thank you for this video, it has helped me completely understand the use of these micrometers!!!
You are the best because your intention is good. You wanted us to learn and we did. You are a teacher. THANKS
Very informative Video, Thank you!! I just bought my first micrometer and need to learn how to properly read it, This was a HUGE help! Thanks again
Great explanation, I start a job on Wednesday and this video has just gave me a massive head start!
Good luck at the new job! A friend of mine gave me some really great advice about starting new things. "Don't fuck up." Her exact words.
Awesome thank you... like reading old analog clock the second hand will tell you where the minute hand and that tells you where the hour hand is
Your the best after I watched this I finally can explain how read micrometer to my instructor teacher 👨🏫 🙂🙂❤️❤️
you're
Totally superb tutorial. Have used mics for years but still learned something, thank you sir.
I truly cannot thank you enough for the simple explanation of how to read these. I was completely not confident on how to read them and now I feel very confident!
You sir are one radical instructor. Thank you!
Circa 1978 I could read a Micrometer in machine shop have not read one since and I was pretty good. Thank you for this vid I am reminiscing.
Wow this is so much easier than I had thought. Thank you for making this material so accessible!
I'm happy to help. Thanks for watching!
Thanks for this informative video! I passed my test today with your help! You rock!
That's awesome. I wish I could say the same for some of my students ;)
Thanks Stu, I only use imperial or digital mics. I haven't used a metric, but I feel I get the idea now. It's odd how the scales are used differently, I guess because MM are just such smaller increments than inches. Thanks for clearing that up...I guess this is why you're a teacher!
Many thanks for refreshing my memory I have not had to use my micrometer for some time now. cheers buddy.
thank you i just watched a UTI video explaining it and I was clueless this has helped me alot.