A Vernier consists of a fixed scale and a moving vernier scale. In a metric vernier the fixed scale is marked in centimeters and millimeters, the vernier scale is nine millimeters long, and is divided into ten parts each 0.9 millimeters long. The distances of each line from the first are therefore 0.9, 1.8, 2.7, mm or generally: where di is the distance between the zero line and the ith line of the vernier scale. If the vernier caliper is closed, so that the two jaws touch each other, the zero of the fixed scale should coincide with the zero of the vernier scale. Opening the jaws 0.03 cm = 0.3 mm will cause the fourth line (the three line which is a distance of 2.7 mm from the zero line of the of the vernier scale) to coincide with the 3 mm line of the fixed scale as shown below.
EXERCISES:
A micrometer can measure distances with more precision than a vernier caliper.
The micrometer has a 0.5 mm pitch screw, this means that you read millimeters
and half millimeters along the barrel. The sleeve is divided into 50 divisions
corresponding to one hundredth of a millimeter (0.01 mm) or 10 each. The vernier scale on the micrometer barrel has ten divisions, marked from
2 to 10 in steps of two. The ``zero'' line is not marked `0', but is longer
than the others. The vernier allows you to read to the nearest thousandth of a
millimeter, i.e., to the nearest micron (0.001 mm = 1 ).
Precaution:
Below are two examples of micrometer reading; the arrow shows which mark on the vernier scale is being used.
In Fig. 7 the zero line on the barrel is barely visible, and the vernier reads 0.003 mm = 3 ; the zero error is .
A negative zero error, as shown below requires a moment of thought.
In Fig. 8 the zero line on the barrel of the micrometer is obscured by the sleeve, (the ``zero" line on the sleeve is above the ``zero" line on the barrel) this corresponds to a reading of -0.5 mm; the vernier reads 0.496 mm the zero error is then .