nickao
Member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2008
- Messages
- 4,617
I work in mils and any machinist can tell you the benefits of it better than I.
Initially a mil or thousandth of an inch was believed to be the smallest measurement a machinist or human could see(actually 1 arc minute(1/60 of one degree) is the smallest a human can generally differentiate) now a mil is stated as the smallest measurement a human can see and reasonably work with. Anything smaller a human really can not see. For a machinist it is a better measurement than a nanometer, which is way to small to work with, other wise we are in decimals of millimeters, which is a huge hassle compared to using mils. So working in thousandths of an inch is the best way to work for machinist tolerances, which of course in woodworking is probably overkill.
Still, I use thousandths of an inch to set up my tools and measure my router bits so I can get accurate offsets. If you do a lot of inlay and start working in mils or thousandths of an inch you will see the benefit and never go back for super accurate work.
One mil is .0254 millimeters, you can see the hassle that can come up working with such decimal numbers(whether in metric or not) in metal work where parts need to match up precisely. Saying 3mils or even or 3.52 mils is a pretty simple nomenclature for a very small, precise number.
Initially a mil or thousandth of an inch was believed to be the smallest measurement a machinist or human could see(actually 1 arc minute(1/60 of one degree) is the smallest a human can generally differentiate) now a mil is stated as the smallest measurement a human can see and reasonably work with. Anything smaller a human really can not see. For a machinist it is a better measurement than a nanometer, which is way to small to work with, other wise we are in decimals of millimeters, which is a huge hassle compared to using mils. So working in thousandths of an inch is the best way to work for machinist tolerances, which of course in woodworking is probably overkill.
Still, I use thousandths of an inch to set up my tools and measure my router bits so I can get accurate offsets. If you do a lot of inlay and start working in mils or thousandths of an inch you will see the benefit and never go back for super accurate work.
One mil is .0254 millimeters, you can see the hassle that can come up working with such decimal numbers(whether in metric or not) in metal work where parts need to match up precisely. Saying 3mils or even or 3.52 mils is a pretty simple nomenclature for a very small, precise number.