Members jcuk Posted January 31, 2022 Members Report Posted January 31, 2022 On 1/29/2022 at 8:36 PM, MtlBiker said: I've been using a typical caliper to measure the thickness of leather and it reads in inches or mm. Is there a pocket gauge that reads in ounces? I've been searching on Amazon and it seem all measure in mm or inches. Surely there's an accurate gauge that reads in ounces? Thanks Just a thought why don't you print out a leather conversion chart fold it up put it in your pocket next to the gauge are already using. Hope this helps JCUK Quote
MtlBiker Posted January 31, 2022 Author Report Posted January 31, 2022 2 hours ago, chrisash said: Does accuracy really matter You buy leather at a approximate thickness be it in ounces or MM , but you skive down to the required thickness based on the original,. there is no set thickness per item its just what you feel happy with, if you want to reduce by 50% just measure the original and reduce to its half the original, for instance if you buy 2mm thick veg tan and want to reduce a part of it that any guide will show you how much you have taken off, its the feel of the leather not the precise measurement. Different temper requires different thickness Any gauge will show the original size and the new size it makes no difference if measured in Ounces, MM or any other scale I know you're right about that, but some flaw in my head makes me really want accuracy in my "gadgets". I on the other hand, may not be that accurate in things I do. When I got my cylinder arm machine, brand new, I was bummed out that the stitch length setting wasn't accurate, and more importantly that the reverse stitch didn't exactly match the forward stitch. After attempts to readjust, it is better, but does it really matter than 4mm is really only 3mm? But it sure bugged me. For thinning leather again you're right... half is half, regardless of whether that's 1mm or 1.5 or even 2. But I know I will be comparing the new gauge with my digital vernier caliper(s) when I get it. (I do have two of those calipers and they are bang on the same.) Cheers! Quote Current machines: Janome HD3000 and Skyline S5, Consew 206RB-5, Singer Profinish serger, Techsew 2750 PRO, Sailrite LSZ-1 Premium, Consew DCS-S4 Skiver
MtlBiker Posted January 31, 2022 Author Report Posted January 31, 2022 1 hour ago, jcuk said: Just a thought why don't you print out a leather conversion chart fold it up put it in your pocket next to the gauge are already using. Hope this helps JCUK The conversion chart isn't the issue... that's easy! But the gauge I have is a vernier caliper and it really doesn't fit in a pocket. (Is that a gun in your pocket, or a ...?) In any case, I've ordered the gauge that Tandy sells. Should have it in a couple of days. Quote Current machines: Janome HD3000 and Skyline S5, Consew 206RB-5, Singer Profinish serger, Techsew 2750 PRO, Sailrite LSZ-1 Premium, Consew DCS-S4 Skiver
CFM tsunkasapa Posted January 31, 2022 CFM Report Posted January 31, 2022 2 hours ago, toxo said: Why worry about ounces? Sooner or later the whole world will convert to the far superior digital and metric system. I put up with the "far superior digital and metric system" while I was stationed in Germany years ago. When I rotated back to the States I dumped it as a bad memory. I haven't done anything in metric since, and never will. Quote Hoka Hey! Today, tomorrow, next week, what does it matter?
toxo Posted January 31, 2022 Report Posted January 31, 2022 4 hours ago, tsunkasapa said: I put up with the "far superior digital and metric system" while I was stationed in Germany years ago. When I rotated back to the States I dumped it as a bad memory. I haven't done anything in metric since, and never will. You are of course entitled to your opinion but be sure of why you hold that opinion. It certainly can't be because the imperial system (The American one at that) is easier than dividing/ multiplying everything by ten!!! Remember a dollar is 100 cents. Quote
toxo Posted January 31, 2022 Report Posted January 31, 2022 On 1/29/2022 at 8:36 PM, MtlBiker said: I've been using a typical caliper to measure the thickness of leather and it reads in inches or mm. Is there a pocket gauge that reads in ounces? I've been searching on Amazon and it seem all measure in mm or inches. Surely there's an accurate gauge that reads in ounces? Thanks Why not just cut a circle out of a sticky label and carefully draw the lines and annotate in ounces. Quote
CFM tsunkasapa Posted January 31, 2022 CFM Report Posted January 31, 2022 I've spent 45 years dealing with 1/32, 1/16, 1/8 etc. The dirt guys do things in tenths of a foot or inch. I don't play their game either. Quote Hoka Hey! Today, tomorrow, next week, what does it matter?
toxo Posted January 31, 2022 Report Posted January 31, 2022 1 minute ago, tsunkasapa said: I've spent 45 years dealing with 1/32, 1/16, 1/8 etc. The dirt guys do things in tenths of a foot or inch. I don't play their game either. Me too. In a previous life I was a fabricator/welder and when the metric system came in over here we all had a moan but there's no denying that once you get over it, it's much easier. Quote
Members chrisash Posted January 31, 2022 Members Report Posted January 31, 2022 4 hours ago, tsunkasapa said: I put up with the "far superior digital and metric system" while I was stationed in Germany years ago. When I rotated back to the States I dumped it as a bad memory. I haven't done anything in metric since, and never will. I guess you have no 9mm or 7.62mm guns then, You only have to look at life to see the vast number of standards that are well past their sell by date, thread in a measure of weight, nuts and bolts in various different threads, sewing needles that are impossible to compare, maybe metric has some advantages Quote Mi omputer is ot ood at speeling , it's not me
CFM tsunkasapa Posted January 31, 2022 CFM Report Posted January 31, 2022 No, I'll stick with what I know. 2 minutes ago, chrisash said: I guess you have no 9mm or 7.62mm guns then, You only have to look at life to see the vast number of standards that are well past their sell by date, thread in a measure of weight, nuts and bolts in various different threads, sewing needles that are impossible to compare, maybe metric has some advantages I have a .308 , a .223, .357, .45 etc Quote Hoka Hey! Today, tomorrow, next week, what does it matter?
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