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digital caliper fault
My cheap electronic calipers have started playing up. If I move it too
quickly, it reads wrong. If moved slowly it seems OK, but that's not very reassuring. Are these things total junk to be avoided, or just I got a bad'un? New battery didn't help. Jordan |
digital caliper fault
Jordan wrote:
My cheap electronic calipers have started playing up. If I move it too quickly, it reads wrong. If moved slowly it seems OK, but that's not very reassuring. Are these things total junk to be avoided, or just I got a bad'un? New battery didn't help. You tend to get what you pay for. Are you using your calipers in a dry enviroment? Wes |
digital caliper fault
Jordan wrote in news:kfDgn.9300$pv.2138@news-
server.bigpond.net.au: My cheap electronic calipers have started playing up. If I move it too quickly, it reads wrong. If moved slowly it seems OK, but that's not very reassuring. Are these things total junk to be avoided, or just I got a bad'un? New battery didn't help. Try cleaning the face of the scale that the readout slides over. Even on my good Mitutoyo, I would get that behavior after many years of grubby finger prints built up on it. I think I used denatured alcohol. Doug White |
digital caliper fault
On 2010-02-22, Jordan wrote:
My cheap electronic calipers have started playing up. If I move it too quickly, it reads wrong. If moved slowly it seems OK, but that's not very reassuring. Are these things total junk to be avoided, or just I got a bad'un? New battery didn't help. O.K. What new battery (cell) did you use? These typically take the LR44/SR357 type cells, and there are Alkaline versions which don't put out as much voltage. Make sure that it is a true SR357 and see what happens. Also -- try washing any accumulated oil and coolant off the cloth/plastic face of the bar. These work by capacitive connection to patterns in the bar under the covering, and accumulation of things which will at least partially conduct electricity (or even change the dialectric constant) can keep them from working right. The behvior of yours is typical to what I see with tired cells, but I haven't personally experienced the buildup of grunge yet so I don't know what it is like. Enjoy, DoN. -- Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564 (too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html --- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero --- |
digital caliper fault
I would also recommend that digital caliper owners use silver oxide SR44
cells. Another potential problem could be the battery/cell contacts in the reader head. They need to be very clean, not "scrape the plating off" clean, but clean. Additionally, I routinely rub coin and button cells on a clean piece of paper (white printer paper is fine) to rub any surface contamination or oxidation off, when I take them out of their package. The OP's symptoms were exactly what I experienced when using the alkaline cells.. moving the head too fast caused missed counts. None of that has happened since I started using silver oxide cells. I keep taking the cell out of digital calipers when I put the caliper back in it's box, because the circuit will eventually drain the cell while the caliper isn't being used (on many models even if the off button is pushed), which will likely cause the cell to leak if it goes completely dead. I keep wanting to add an on/off switch (a tiny one from a mini LED keychain light) but still haven't gotten rountuit. -- WB .......... "DoN. Nichols" wrote in message ... On 2010-02-22, Jordan wrote: My cheap electronic calipers have started playing up. If I move it too quickly, it reads wrong. If moved slowly it seems OK, but that's not very reassuring. Are these things total junk to be avoided, or just I got a bad'un? New battery didn't help. O.K. What new battery (cell) did you use? These typically take the LR44/SR357 type cells, and there are Alkaline versions which don't put out as much voltage. Make sure that it is a true SR357 and see what happens. Also -- try washing any accumulated oil and coolant off the cloth/plastic face of the bar. These work by capacitive connection to patterns in the bar under the covering, and accumulation of things which will at least partially conduct electricity (or even change the dialectric constant) can keep them from working right. The behvior of yours is typical to what I see with tired cells, but I haven't personally experienced the buildup of grunge yet so I don't know what it is like. Enjoy, DoN. -- Email: | Voice (all times): (703) 938-4564 (too) near Washington D.C. | http://www.d-and-d.com/dnichols/DoN.html --- Black Holes are where God is dividing by zero --- |
digital caliper fault
"Jordan" wrote in message ... My cheap electronic calipers have started playing up. If I move it too quickly, it reads wrong. If moved slowly it seems OK, but that's not very reassuring. Are these things total junk to be avoided, or just I got a bad'un? New battery didn't help. What temperature are you keeping them at? I found that if they are stored in a cold garage they will start playing up. A blow with a hair dryer restores them in 30 seconds. I also keep a pair warm just in case. There is a thread about it on this group somewhere. -- Michael Koblic, Campbell River, BC |
digital caliper fault
The caliper is clean, but the battery is alkaline. I didn't know not to
use these, so will get some silver oxide type and try that. Thank you. Jordan |
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