When cleaning the shop where I work one day, I found an old Tesa micrometer head. It was very unique as the sleeve was graduated only in 0.1 inch increments, not the traditional 0.025 inch. The thousands indication was instead done with a set of rotation indicators behind a window that ticked off every 5 thousandth. The micrometer was also graduated in 0.0005 inch increments with a 0.0001 vernier. Its a very beautiful and high quality tool but it had be abused and left in disrepair; the locking screw was missing, it was quite dirty and gummed up. I took it into my care and after a disassembly, cleaning, adjustment and a homemade replacement part, it was good as new.
Now what do I do with it? I have a very accurate outside micrometer already. I decided a depth micrometer would be very useful, especially when grinding thin parts on the surface grinder. Even though this micrometer head is intended for outside use, you can still measure depth by subtracting the read measurement from 1. The issue with using it on the grinder is it will stick to the chuck. Simple solution; use carbide.
The body of the is foot hardened A2. It was all machined out of my head, no drawings or CAD. I tried brazing the carbide blocks in but we just don't have the right type of flux where I work and I ended up having to remake the steel part. As a substitute for brazing I glued the blocks on with Loctite 380. All sides were ground after the glue cured.
The micrometer head is held in with a split pipe thread bushing. With pipe threads being tapered, if you cut a slit in a male pipe fitting, the fitting will collapse as you tighten it. After grinding I very carefully trammed a milling machine and took a skim cut on my fixture plate. I clamped the foot down flat to the fixture plate to ensure the bore I put in the bushing was as close to square to the bottom face as possible. Under slight pre-tension, I bored the brass bushing to fit the micrometer head.
Assembly was straightforward after that. I set the micrometer head within .005 inch in the bushing, then used the sleeve to zero it. The tool has a very consistent repeat reading. I checked the accuracy with gauge blocks and the reading is spot on. The issue I did find was the foot has a .0006 inch convex bow in it. This changes the micrometer reading depending on which side of the foot you apply pressure to. I want to fix this in the future but I can only see doing this through lapping. I don't have any lapping equipment right now. However, under normal use the tool still is very usable, and most importantly doesn't stick to the mag chuck when grinding.
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