Lab 01: Measurement Using Vernier Caliper and Micrometer

Learning Objectives

  • Identify the parts and functions of a vernier caliper and a micrometer screw gauge.
  • Measure external diameter, internal diameter, depth, thickness, and small circular dimensions accurately.
  • Determine the least count, zero error, zero correction, observed reading, and corrected reading of each instrument.
  • Compare accuracy, precision, uncertainty, and practical limitations of the vernier caliper and micrometer.
  • Record repeated trials using correct units, significant figures, and final uncertainty notation.

Precision measurement is one of the first skills required in engineering laboratory work. A meterstick or ordinary ruler is useful for approximate measurements, but it is not sufficient when the object is small, the tolerance is tight, or the result will be used in calculations such as density, stress, strain, or material testing. In this experiment, you will use two common precision instruments: the vernier caliper and the micrometer screw gauge.

Target Learning Outcome

After completing this experiment, students should be able to select an appropriate precision instrument, obtain repeated dimensional measurements, correct for zero error, and report final dimensions with justified precision.

Why this lab matters in engineering

Civil and mechanical engineering measurements often begin with simple dimensions: diameter, thickness, depth, and width. Small errors in these dimensions can produce larger errors in computed area, volume, density, stress, or strain. This lab trains the habit of checking the instrument first, reading the scale carefully, applying zero correction, and reporting a value that honestly reflects the instrument resolution.

Pre-Lab Preparation

Before entering the laboratory

I. Equipment / Materials Needed

ApparatusPurpose
Vernier caliperMeasures outside dimensions, inside dimensions, depth, and step height.
Micrometer screw gaugeMeasures small outside dimensions such as wire diameter, sheet thickness, and small rod diameter.
Test objectsExample: coin, washer, metal rod, wire, small rectangular block, sheet sample, or hollow cylinder.
Clean cloth or tissueRemoves dust, oil, and particles from the measuring faces.
Laboratory worksheetRecords raw readings, zero errors, corrected readings, and computed averages.
CalculatorComputes least count, correction, average, percentage difference, and uncertainty.

Instrument care

Do not use the caliper jaws or micrometer spindle as clamps. Excessive force can deform the object, damage the measuring faces, or introduce a systematic error into every reading.

II. Discussion of Theory

Reliable measurement requires more than reading a number from a scale. The user must know the instrument resolution, check whether the instrument reads zero correctly, apply the proper correction, and report the result with a unit and a reasonable number of digits.

Precision and Accuracy

Precision

Precision is the closeness of repeated measurements to each other. A precise set of measurements has little spread, even if all readings are shifted by a systematic error.

Accuracy

Accuracy is the closeness of a measured value to the true or accepted value. A measurement can be precise but inaccurate if the instrument has an uncorrected zero error.

Precision versus accuracy in this lab

A micrometer usually gives more precise readings than a vernier caliper because it has a smaller least count. However, a precise instrument can still give inaccurate results if it is dirty, misread, overtightened, or not corrected for zero error.

Instrumental Concepts

Least Count

Least count is the smallest value an instrument can directly and reliably resolve. For example, common vernier calipers may have least counts of 0.1mm0.1\,\text{mm}, 0.05mm0.05\,\text{mm}, or 0.02mm0.02\,\text{mm}, while many metric micrometers have a least count of 0.01mm0.01\,\text{mm}.

Zero Error

Zero error is the reading displayed by an instrument when the true reading should be zero. For example, a closed caliper or micrometer should read 0.00mm0.00\,\text{mm}. If it does not, the error must be recorded.

Zero Correction

Zero correction is the adjustment applied to remove the effect of zero error. The safest rule is to subtract the zero error from the observed reading.

Corrected Reading

Corrected reading is the final instrument reading after zero error has been removed from the observed reading.

Parallax Error

Parallax error occurs when the observer reads the scale from an angle instead of viewing it directly in front of the scale mark.

Systematic and Random Error

A systematic error shifts readings consistently in one direction, such as an uncorrected zero error. A random error causes small unpredictable changes among repeated trials, such as slight variation in hand pressure or scale reading.

Uncertainty and Significant Figures

Uncertainty in analog readings

Every measurement contains uncertainty because a scale has finite resolution and the user must judge alignment. A common introductory estimate for analog instruments is one-half of the least count.

Estimated instrumental uncertainty

Use this as an introductory estimate for analog scale readings.

Δx±LC2\Delta x \approx \pm \frac{LC}{2}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
Δx\Delta xestimated instrumental uncertaintymm
LCLCleast count of the instrumentmm

Significant figures

Significant figures indicate the reliability of a measured or calculated value. When reporting a measurement, the number of decimal places must be consistent with the instrument least count. For example, if a micrometer has a least count of 0.01mm0.01\,\text{mm}, a measurement should be reported as 12.40mm12.40\,\text{mm}, not 12.4mm12.4\,\text{mm} or 12.400mm12.400\,\text{mm}.

Core reporting rule

A numerical measurement is incomplete without its unit. Write 12.46 mm, not just 12.46. Also avoid reporting more decimal places than the instrument can justify.

III. Part A: Vernier Caliper

Vernier Caliper

A vernier caliper is a precision measuring instrument with a fixed main scale and a sliding vernier scale. It can measure external dimensions, internal dimensions, depth, and step height.

Main parts and functions

PartFunction
Main scaleFixed scale marked in millimeters, centimeters, or inches.
Vernier scaleSliding auxiliary scale used to read fractions of a main scale division.
Fixed outside jawStationary lower jaw for external measurements.
Movable outside jawSliding lower jaw that contacts the opposite side of the object.
Fixed inside jawStationary upper jaw for internal measurements.
Movable inside jawSliding upper jaw for internal diameter or internal width.
Depth rodThin rod extending from the end of the caliper for depth measurement.
SliderMoving body that carries the vernier scale and movable jaws.
Lock screwHolds the slider position after the measurement is taken.
Thumb wheel or fine adjustmentHelps move the slider smoothly and carefully.
Step measuring facesFlat reference faces used for step or shoulder measurements.

Simple vernier caliper diagram

   Inside jaws
    /\      /\
   /  \____/  \

 Fixed jaw        Movable jaw
    |                 |
 ___|_________________|____________________________
| Main scale                                      |
|_________________________________________________|
        | Vernier scale |
        |_______________|
             Slider
              |
              |-------------------- Depth rod

Outside jaws: external measurement
Inside jaws: internal measurement
Depth rod: depth measurement

Types of measurements using the vernier caliper

Measurement typePart usedExample
External measurementOutside jawsDiameter of a rod, thickness of a block, width of an object.
Internal measurementInside jawsInside diameter of a pipe, ring, or hollow cylinder.
Depth measurementDepth rodDepth of a hole, slot, or container.
Step measurementStep measuring facesHeight of a step or shoulder on a workpiece.

Vernier caliper least count

The least count depends on the relationship between one main scale division and one vernier scale division.

LC=1MSD1VSDLC = 1\,MSD - 1\,VSD

Practical note

If the caliper is already marked with a least count such as 0.1mm0.1\,\text{mm}, 0.05mm0.05\,\text{mm}, or 0.02mm0.02\,\text{mm}, use the value printed on the instrument.

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
LCLCleast count of the vernier calipermm
MSDMSDone main scale divisionmm
VSDVSDone vernier scale divisionmm

Vernier caliper reading

Add the main scale reading to the vernier scale contribution, then apply zero correction if needed.

Observed reading=MSR+(CVD)(LC)\text{Observed reading} = MSR + (CVD)(LC)Corrected reading=Observed readingZero error\text{Corrected reading} = \text{Observed reading} - \text{Zero error}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
MSRMSRmain scale reading immediately before the vernier zeromm
CVDCVDcoinciding vernier divisiondivision
LCLCleast countmm/division

Vernier caliper procedure

  1. Clean the jaws and the object to remove dust, oil, and particles.
  2. Close the jaws gently and check whether the zero of the vernier scale aligns with the zero of the main scale.
  3. Record the zero error. If the vernier zero is to the right of the main-scale zero, the zero error is positive. If it is to the left, the zero error is negative.
  4. For external measurement, place the object between the outside jaws and close the jaws until they touch the object lightly.
  5. For internal measurement, place the inside jaws inside the opening and expand them until both jaws touch the internal walls.
  6. For depth measurement, place the caliper body flat on the surface and lower the depth rod until it touches the bottom.
  7. Keep the caliper aligned with the dimension being measured. Avoid tilting the instrument or the object.
  8. Read the main scale value immediately before the vernier zero.
  9. Find the vernier division that exactly coincides with a main-scale line.
  10. Compute the observed reading and then apply zero correction.
  11. Repeat the measurement at least three times and compute the average corrected reading.

Sample vernier caliper reading

Given values

QuantityValue
Main scale reading, MSRMSR36mm36\,\text{mm}
Coinciding vernier division, CVDCVD77
Least count, LCLC0.02mm0.02\,\text{mm}
Zero error+0.04mm+0.04\,\text{mm}
Observed reading=36+7(0.02)=36.14mm\text{Observed reading} = 36 + 7(0.02) = 36.14\,\text{mm}Corrected reading=36.140.04=36.10mm\text{Corrected reading} = 36.14 - 0.04 = 36.10\,\text{mm}

IV. Part B: Micrometer Screw Gauge

Micrometer Screw Gauge

A micrometer screw gauge is a precision instrument that uses a fine screw mechanism to measure small dimensions. Rotating the thimble moves the spindle toward or away from the anvil by a very small and controlled distance.

Main parts and functions

PartFunction
FrameRigid C-shaped body that supports the instrument.
AnvilFixed measuring face where one side of the object rests.
SpindleMovable measuring face that advances toward the anvil.
Sleeve or barrelFixed cylindrical part containing the main scale.
Main scaleScale on the sleeve used to read millimeters and sometimes half-millimeters.
ThimbleRotating part containing the circular scale.
Thimble scaleCircular scale used to read small fractions of a millimeter.
Ratchet stopApplies nearly uniform measuring pressure and prevents overtightening.
Lock nut or spindle lockHolds the spindle position after a reading is taken.
Measuring facesFlat surfaces of the anvil and spindle that contact the object.

Simple micrometer diagram

          Ratchet stop
              ||
              \/
  ______________________________________
 |                                      |
 |  Sleeve / barrel      Thimble        |
 |  Main scale        Circular scale    |
 |_____|__________________|_____________|
       |                  |
       |                  |
   ____|__________________|____
  /                            \
 /                              \
|   Anvil      Object      Spindle |
 \                              /
  \____________________________/
              Frame

Micrometer least count

For a metric micrometer, the least count is the pitch divided by the number of thimble divisions.

LC=pitchnumber of thimble divisionsLC = \frac{\text{pitch}}{\text{number of thimble divisions}}

Common metric micrometer

For many metric micrometers, one full thimble rotation advances the spindle by 0.5mm0.5\,\text{mm} and the thimble has 50 divisions.

LC=0.5mm50=0.01mmLC = \frac{0.5\,\text{mm}}{50} = 0.01\,\text{mm}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
LCLCleast count of the micrometermm
pitch\text{pitch}linear movement of the spindle for one full thimble rotationmm/revolution

Micrometer reading

Add the sleeve reading and thimble reading, then apply zero correction.

Observed reading=MSR+(TSD)(LC)\text{Observed reading} = MSR + (TSD)(LC)Corrected reading=Observed readingZero error\text{Corrected reading} = \text{Observed reading} - \text{Zero error}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
MSRMSRmain scale or sleeve readingmm
TSDTSDthimble scale division aligned with the reference linedivision
LCLCleast countmm/division

Micrometer procedure

  1. Wipe the anvil and spindle faces clean.
  2. Close the micrometer gently using the ratchet stop, not by forcing the thimble.
  3. Check whether the zero of the thimble scale aligns with the sleeve reference line.
  4. Record the zero error. If the thimble zero passes the reference line, treat the zero error as positive. If it has not yet reached the reference line, treat it as negative.
  5. Open the spindle enough to place the object between the anvil and spindle.
  6. Hold the object squarely between the measuring faces.
  7. Turn the thimble until the spindle nearly touches the object, then use the ratchet stop until it clicks gently.
  8. Lock the spindle if needed.
  9. Read the main scale or sleeve reading.
  10. Read the thimble division aligned with the reference line.
  11. Compute the observed reading and apply zero correction.
  12. Repeat the measurement at several orientations when measuring circular objects such as wire or rods.

Sample micrometer reading

Given values

QuantityValue
Main scale reading, MSRMSR7.5mm7.5\,\text{mm}
Thimble scale division, TSDTSD3232
Least count, LCLC0.01mm0.01\,\text{mm}
Zero error0.02mm-0.02\,\text{mm}
Observed reading=7.5+32(0.01)=7.82mm\text{Observed reading} = 7.5 + 32(0.01) = 7.82\,\text{mm}Corrected reading=7.82(0.02)=7.84mm\text{Corrected reading} = 7.82 - (-0.02) = 7.84\,\text{mm}

V. Zero Error and Zero Correction

How to think about zero correction

A zero error is the reading that the instrument shows when the true reading should be zero. The safest general rule is to subtract the zero error from the observed reading. This works for both positive and negative zero error. Subtracting a positive zero error decreases the reading. Subtracting a negative zero error increases the reading.

General zero-correction rule

Corrected reading=Observed readingZero error\text{Corrected reading} = \text{Observed reading} - \text{Zero error}
InstrumentPositive zero errorNegative zero error
Vernier caliperVernier zero is to the right of the main-scale zero when jaws are closed.Vernier zero is to the left of the main-scale zero when jaws are closed.
MicrometerThimble zero has passed the sleeve reference line when closed.Thimble zero has not reached the sleeve reference line when closed.
Correction ruleSubtract the positive zero error.Add the magnitude of the negative zero error.

VI. Comparison of Instruments

FeatureVernier caliperMicrometer screw gauge
Main useGeneral dimensional measurement.High-precision small outside measurement.
Common measurementsOutside diameter, inside diameter, depth, step height.Wire diameter, sheet thickness, small rod diameter.
Typical least count0.1mm0.1\,\text{mm}, 0.05mm0.05\,\text{mm}, or 0.02mm0.02\,\text{mm}.Often 0.01mm0.01\,\text{mm} for common metric micrometers.
Measuring rangeCommonly 00 to 150mm150\,\text{mm} or larger.Commonly 00 to 25mm25\,\text{mm} per micrometer frame.
Pressure controlMostly controlled by user hand pressure.Ratchet stop helps provide uniform pressure.
VersatilityMore versatile.More precise for a limited type of measurement.

Instrument selection guide

Use the vernier caliper when the object requires outside, inside, or depth measurement. Use the micrometer when the object is small enough to fit between the anvil and spindle and a more precise outside measurement is required.

VII. Data and Observation Tables

A. Vernier caliper zero check

TrialZero position observationZero error, mmZero correction, mm
1
2
3
Average

B. Vernier caliper measurement table

ObjectMeasurement typeTrialMSR, mmCVDLC, mmObserved reading, mmZero error, mmCorrected reading, mm
External diameter1
External diameter2
External diameter3
Internal diameter1
Depth1

C. Micrometer zero check

TrialThimble zero observationZero error, mmZero correction, mm
1
2
3
Average

D. Micrometer measurement table

ObjectTrialMSR, mmTSDLC, mmObserved reading, mmZero error, mmCorrected reading, mm
Wire diameter1
Wire diameter2
Wire diameter3
Sheet thickness1
Sheet thickness2
Sheet thickness3

E. Final averaged results table

ObjectDimension measuredInstrument usedAverage corrected reading, mmEstimated uncertainty, mmResult (x=xˉ±Δxx = \bar{x} \pm \Delta x), mm

VIII. Computations

Average corrected reading

Use repeated trials to reduce random error.

xˉ=x1+x2+x3++xnn\bar{x} = \frac{x_1 + x_2 + x_3 + \cdots + x_n}{n}

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
xˉ\bar{x}average corrected readingmm
xix_iindividual corrected readingmm
nnnumber of trialscount

Final result format

Report the average reading with its estimated instrumental uncertainty.

x=xˉ±Δxx = \bar{x} \pm \Delta x

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
xxreported final measurementmm
xˉ\bar{x}average corrected readingmm
Δx\Delta xestimated uncertaintymm

Percent difference

Use this to compare two measured values or compare two instruments measuring the same dimension.

Percent difference=x1x2x1+x22×100%\text{Percent difference} = \frac{|x_1 - x_2|}{\frac{x_1 + x_2}{2}} \times 100\%

Variables

SymbolDescriptionUnit
x1x_1first measurementmm
x2x_2second measurementmm

Sample final-result reporting

Given values

Three corrected readings for a wire diameter are 1.24mm1.24\,\text{mm}, 1.25mm1.25\,\text{mm}, and 1.23mm1.23\,\text{mm}. The micrometer least count is 0.01mm0.01\,\text{mm}.

xˉ=1.24+1.25+1.233=1.24mm\bar{x} = \frac{1.24 + 1.25 + 1.23}{3} = 1.24\,\text{mm}Δx±0.012=±0.005mm\Delta x \approx \pm \frac{0.01}{2} = \pm 0.005\,\text{mm}

Reported result

x=1.240±0.005mmx = 1.240 \pm 0.005\,\text{mm} if the instructor requires uncertainty to one-half least count. If the course requires matching the least-count decimal place only, report 1.24mm1.24\,\text{mm} with the instrument least count stated separately.

IX. Expected Results and Interpretation

Expected observations

X. Error Analysis

Common sources of error

Good measurement habits

XI. Observations and Conclusion

Observations guide

Record physical difficulties encountered during measurement, such as uneven object surfaces, issues with applying uniform pressure, or difficulty reading the scale. Mention how these factors may have affected precision and accuracy.

Conclusion guide

A strong conclusion does not only repeat the final numbers. It should state whether the objectives were achieved, compare the instruments, mention the effect of zero correction, and identify the largest likely source of error in the experiment. Connect the concept of least count to the confidence in the final reported results.

XII. Post-Lab Questions

Answer the following questions

  1. Why is a micrometer usually more precise than a vernier caliper?
  2. Why should the ratchet stop be used instead of directly tightening the thimble by force?
  3. A vernier caliper reads 18.36mm18.36\,\text{mm} with a zero error of 0.04mm-0.04\,\text{mm}. What is the corrected reading?
  4. A micrometer has MSR=4.5mmMSR = 4.5\,\text{mm}, TSD=28TSD = 28, and LC=0.01mmLC = 0.01\,\text{mm}. If the zero error is +0.03mm+0.03\,\text{mm}, what is the corrected reading?
  5. Why should a circular object be measured in more than one orientation?
  6. What is the difference between accuracy and precision in this experiment?
  7. A vernier caliper has MSR=22mmMSR = 22\,\text{mm}, CVD=6CVD = 6, and LC=0.05mmLC = 0.05\,\text{mm}. If zero error is +0.10mm+0.10\,\text{mm}, find the corrected reading.
  8. A micrometer has a pitch of 0.5mm0.5\,\text{mm} and 50 thimble divisions. What is its least count?

XIII. Answer Key for Selected Questions

QuestionAnswer
318.36(0.04)=18.40mm18.36 - (-0.04) = 18.40\,\text{mm}
4Observed reading =4.5+28(0.01)=4.78mm= 4.5 + 28(0.01) = 4.78\,\text{mm}; corrected reading =4.780.03=4.75mm= 4.78 - 0.03 = 4.75\,\text{mm}.
7Observed reading =22+6(0.05)=22.30mm= 22 + 6(0.05) = 22.30\,\text{mm}; corrected reading =22.300.10=22.20mm= 22.30 - 0.10 = 22.20\,\text{mm}.
8LC=0.5mm/50=0.01mmLC = 0.5\,\text{mm}/50 = 0.01\,\text{mm}.

XIV. Lab Report Format

Recommended report sections

  1. Title of experiment.
  2. Objectives.
  3. Apparatus and materials.
  4. Brief theory with formulas for least count, observed reading, corrected reading, uncertainty, and average.
  5. Procedure written in past tense.
  6. Data and observation tables.
  7. Sample calculation for one vernier reading and one micrometer reading.
  8. Final results with units and appropriate decimal places.
  9. Error analysis and precautions.
  10. Conclusion summarizing what instrument was more precise and why.

XV. Suggested Grading Rubric

CriterionExcellent work shows
Data recordingComplete raw readings, trials, zero errors, and units.
CalculationsCorrect formulas, substitutions, corrected readings, averages, and uncertainties.
Instrument useCorrect measuring faces, proper alignment, clean contact surfaces, and gentle pressure.
AnalysisClear comparison of vernier caliper and micrometer precision.
ConclusionExplains objectives, final results, zero correction, and major error sources.

Instructor note

This Lab 01 file was manually polished to remove loose instructional text outside MDX content blocks, strengthen the theory section, add pre-lab preparation, improve expected-results guidance, expand selected answer keys, and add a suggested grading rubric while keeping the existing quiz-compatible topic path.