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Just splashed out on a precision instrument

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Ady Wilson24/11/2017 19:45:17
41 forum posts
14 photos

Just spent some hard earned on this very rare dial indicator by the well respected company Miluloyo. I have always wanted one but sadly they were always out of my price range. I got it off Ebay and I am guessing that someone at the factory perhaps pinched it because it obviously never got to the inspector for quality checkup or even got an enginery number.

miluloyo.jpg

I bought it because I lost the stylus/lever of mine and it was going to be £5 quid for a new one so I took a flyer on this for £8 delivered. I trammed a vice in with it today and it worked perfectly well. The cheap copies done by Mitutoyo come in at over a £100 so I think i got a deal getting the real thing so cheap.

Ady.

Michael Gilligan24/11/2017 19:51:45
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23121 forum posts
1360 photos

Nice one Ady smiley

... and, I see that these real ones don't have all that messy writing on the 'Certificate of Inspection'

MichaelG.

Simon Williams 324/11/2017 20:33:22
728 forum posts
90 photos

Well, I'm sorry to p$$s on the party but that isn't a Mitutoyo certificate, signed or otherwise.

Or did I miss the point?

Michael Gilligan24/11/2017 20:34:49
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23121 forum posts
1360 photos
Posted by Simon Williams 3 on 24/11/2017 20:33:22:

Or did I miss the point?

.

Yes

Michael Briggs24/11/2017 20:50:14
221 forum posts
12 photos

I bought a 'Mitutoyo' micrometer on fakebay last year. It was quite convincing until I removed the screw, got a refund from the seller who claimed they had been duped. I doubt that.

Rick Kirkland 124/11/2017 21:05:27
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175 forum posts

Unless my eyes deceive me the OP has written Miluloyo and that is exactly what it says on the dial face, therefore it is NOT a Mitutoyo dial indicator but one of those items of fake Chinese junk that are catching out the unwary, with increasing frequency.

Neil Wyatt24/11/2017 21:12:33
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19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

You are supposed to fill in the certificate with whatever makes you feel happiest.

Neil

Neil Wyatt24/11/2017 21:15:47
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19226 forum posts
749 photos
86 articles

Just as an aside - I'm sure people have noticed that Chinese and Japanese QC certificates have little rubber stamps on them instead of signatures. While this may sometimes raise suspicions, that is the legal way of signing a document in those countries. My daughter expects to spend a gap year in Japan and she is likely to need two or three for different purposes (you would use a different one to open a bank account to eh one you might use to sign a letter).

Neil

Ady Wilson24/11/2017 21:16:03
41 forum posts
14 photos

I just wish all my tools had an "enginery" number, it sounds very professional.

MW24/11/2017 21:57:53
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2052 forum posts
56 photos

I'm afraid if you want a real mitutoyo product then ebay isn't the safest way to do it. You need to go through a proper distributor like MSC industrial or machine DRO.

I'm sceptical as to whether it'll be as decent as a real one. Why would they charge so little if they know they could get more for it? 

Michael W

 

Edited By Michael-w on 24/11/2017 22:01:15

IanT24/11/2017 22:30:53
2147 forum posts
222 photos

Many of my tools didn't have an 'enginery' number Ady - but since I've put one on them, I do feel they are a lot more accurate.

IanT

Ady Wilson24/11/2017 22:46:39
41 forum posts
14 photos
Posted by IanT on 24/11/2017 22:30:53:

Many of my tools didn't have an 'enginery' number Ady - but since I've put one on them, I do feel they are a lot more accurate.

IanT

haha nice one Ian. I think I might print out a few certificates to go with my tools would probably increase their value aswell as accuracy

laugh

Thor 🇳🇴25/11/2017 06:28:55
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1766 forum posts
46 photos

Hi Ady,

I got a similar DTI as a gift, but the label says Mitutogo, not "Miluloyo" as yours. It has worked well for several years, I haven't checked it against my older DTI though.

Thor

Bazyle25/11/2017 09:51:24
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6956 forum posts
229 photos

It seems a few people may not be familiar with the leading brands and er not so leading. Perhaps there should be an article in Model Enginery Workshop. cool

Doubletop26/11/2017 06:59:47
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439 forum posts
4 photos
Posted by Bazyle on 25/11/2017 09:51:24:

It seems a few people may not be familiar with the leading brands and er not so leading. Perhaps there should be an article in Model Enginery Workshop. cool

"Misleading Brands?

jimmy b26/11/2017 08:04:03
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857 forum posts
45 photos

I've got a couple of these for day to day clocking up.

If its "important", I get the real one out!

Jim

Brian Rutherford26/11/2017 09:55:24
109 forum posts
3 photos

A good friend of mine in his eighties has mitutoyo verniers and micrometers but only keeps them for "best" and uses his cheap chinese ones for everyday use. Whats the point of having them?. He should give them to me

John Hinkley26/11/2017 09:55:48
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1545 forum posts
484 photos

Jimmy b,

Exactly so. I, like many on here I suspect, mainly use these devices to align vices, etc, on the mill or check parallelism of some description. Unless I'm using it wrongly, accuracy or scale doesn't come into it. In these circumstances it is merely a comparator. Like the man said, if it is important, use a real one.

John

Vic26/11/2017 10:15:16
3453 forum posts
23 photos

I can’t find the page now but Long Island Indicator.

**LINK**

Have not in the past been very impressed with Mitutoyo indicators, much preferring Swiss made products. I don’t think I need to repeat what they think of Chinese indicators.

Martin Dowing26/11/2017 10:21:10
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356 forum posts
8 photos

About 15 years ago I have purchased few micrometers of Mitutoyo on ebay but it was good old time when cheats was rare. At the time such items were going for 20 queeds or so. Bought few with ranges 25-150mm, hardly used, with certificates.

At the time I have also bought ex store 25mm and 1inch Starret external mic, bore allignement clock (0.0005" ex Verdict and precision clock ex Starret. All with vernier scale reading, mics are up to 1micron accurate but such accuracy is rarely needed and in any case requires great care to reproduce readings. These are expensive items. 15 years ago each such piece was approx 120 queeds and I had permanent 20% discount negotiated. Of course together with mics they are providing calibration bars of accurate lenght.

Perhaps my best buy of precision equipment on ebay was Watson precision level made in 1960-ties. My friend from academia (experimental physics) looks on that one with envy. Advice is to keep it as piece of historic equipment but in his opinion only laser interferometers can compete with it. Between bubble levels it is a jewel and it was only 15 qeeds on ebay.

Martin

Edited By Martin Dowing on 26/11/2017 10:22:19

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