A dial caliper is a sliding-jaw measuring instrument that displays its reading on a rotating dial face driven by a rack-and-pinion mechanism, rather than on a vernier scale (mechanical) or LCD display (digital). It reads to 0.001 inch or 0.02 mm at a glance, runs on no batteries, survives bright outdoor light that washes out an LCD, and gives a tactile feel for measurement that practitioners on Practical Machinist and Home Shop Machinist BBS describe as the bridge between traditional vernier and modern digital tools.
This guide explains how the rack-and-pinion mechanism actually works, how to read a dial caliper in metric and imperial without rounding errors, the JIS B 7507:2022 accuracy specifications that govern all calipers globally, the dial vs vernier vs digital decision matrix, the Mitutoyo dial caliper supply reality in Australia for genuine warranty-backed instruments, the counterfeit Mitutoyo problem flooding eBay and Amazon with fakes (and the five checks that spot them in 30 seconds), the rack-and-pinion failure modes that destroy cheap dial calipers within six months, and how to choose between workshop-tier Dasqua (stocked at AIMS) and premium-tier Mitutoyo (available through AIMS via our authorised supply chain).
For the vernier-scale fundamentals, see our Vernier Caliper Guide. For the digital deep-dive on capacitive encoders, IP ratings and Mitutoyo Absolute technology, see our Digital Caliper Guide. This article is the dial deep-dive — the third spoke of the AIMS caliper cluster.
Dial caliper sizing — imperial and metric ranges — Quick Reference
Dial calipers are produced in a standard range of sizes. The right choice depends on the largest dimension you regularly measure plus a margin — but going significantly larger than you need adds bulk, weight and cost without benefit.
| Range | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| 0–100 mm / 0–4 inch | Tight-quarters work, pocket carry, jewellery / electronics, very small fabrication | Limited to small workpieces. Most workshops want at least the next size up |
| 0–150 mm / 0–6 inch | The default workshop size. Covers most fastener, fitting, machined-part and fabrication work | Slightly limiting on larger parts but the standard general-purpose choice |
| 0–200 mm / 0–8 inch | Larger fabrication, automotive, general engineering work where the 150 mm is occasionally short | Slightly heavier and bulkier than 150 mm — but a useful upgrade for general workshop use |
| 0–300 mm / 0–12 inch | Heavy fabrication, large machined parts, structural work, mining and earthmoving components | Noticeably heavier. Cumulative pitch error in the rack becomes a real factor — buy a quality brand for this size |
| 0–600 mm / 0–24 inch | Very large fabrication, ship building, civil structural, oversize machined parts | Heavy. Long-range dial calipers magnify any rack pitch error. Almost exclusively a Mitutoyo or Starrett purchase at this size |
What is a dial caliper — and how it differs from vernier and digital
A dial caliper is a precision sliding-jaw measuring instrument where the position of the slider is communicated to a rotating dial face via a small rack gear cut into the underside of the beam and a matching pinion gear inside the dial housing. As the slider moves, the rack drives the pinion, the pinion rotates the dial pointer, and the operator reads the measurement by adding the main scale reading (whole inches plus tenths) to the dial reading (thousandths or hundredths).
The mechanical structure is identical to a vernier or digital caliper — fixed jaw on the beam, sliding jaw with the depth rod extending out the back, internal-measurement jaws on the top. Only the readout mechanism changes. Practitioner consensus on Practical Machinist and Sawmill Creek positions the three types as follows:
| Type | How it reads | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vernier | Mechanical vernier scale on the slider, read against the main scale beam | Trade training, battery-free reliability, environments hostile to electronics | Slowest to read, requires practice, parallax-prone |
| Dial | Mechanical rack-and-pinion driving a dial face (0–100 graduations per revolution imperial, 0–50 metric) | Fast analog read, no batteries, comparative measurement, no electronics dependency, intuitive zeroing | Mechanism is delicate — dropping the caliper damages rack and pinion. Chips in the rack cause the dial to skip |
| Digital | Capacitive encoder driving an LCD display in mm or inches at the press of a button | Fast, low-skill-floor measurement, mm/inch toggle, data output, ABS/INC for batch work | Battery-dependent, electronics-vulnerable, IP rating matters in wet environments |
The dial caliper occupies a defensible middle ground. It is faster to read than a vernier and easier to learn (no parallax issues, no vernier-scale interpolation). It does not depend on batteries or electronics like a digital caliper. Practitioners who maintain a workshop tool cabinet often keep one of each — a vernier for ultimate reliability, a digital for speed and data output, and a dial for general bench work where the analog feel and quick read both matter.
How a dial caliper actually works — the rack-and-pinion mechanism
The mechanical heart of a dial caliper is a precision rack-and-pinion gear set, machined to tolerances roughly one order of magnitude finer than the caliper's stated accuracy. Understanding how it works explains both its strengths and its specific failure modes.
On the underside of the beam (the long, fixed bar that the slider rides along), a small rack gear is cut along the full length of travel. The teeth on this rack are tiny — typically 0.5 mm pitch on a metric instrument, or about 50 teeth per inch on imperial. The teeth must be cut to a consistent pitch across the entire length of the beam, because any error in pitch translates directly into reading error at the dial.
Inside the dial housing on the slider is a matching pinion gear meshed with the beam rack. The pinion is rigidly coupled to the dial pointer through a small gear train and a torsion spring that takes up backlash. As the slider moves, the rack drives the pinion, the pinion rotates the dial pointer through the gear train, and the dial pointer sweeps across the dial face.
The gear ratios are chosen so that one full revolution of the dial pointer corresponds to exactly 0.100 inch of slider travel (imperial dial calipers) or exactly 1 mm or 2 mm of slider travel (metric dial calipers). With 100 graduations marked around the dial face on an imperial instrument, each graduation represents 0.001 inch — the standard resolution of a dial caliper. Metric instruments typically have 100 graduations representing 0.01 mm each, or 50 graduations representing 0.02 mm each, depending on the dial range.
A critical detail competitors often miss: the dial reading is added to the main scale reading. The main scale shows whole inches and tenths (0.1, 0.2, 0.3...) marked along the beam. The dial pointer shows the remainder (the thousandths). On a measurement of 1.345 inches, the main scale would read just past the 1.3 mark, and the dial pointer would read 45 thousandths. You add: 1.3 plus 0.045 equals 1.345 inches. The same logic applies metrically — main scale shows whole millimetres and the dial fills in the hundredths.
The torsion spring inside the dial mechanism is what gives a quality dial caliper its smooth, consistent feel during measurement. It pre-loads the gear train in one direction, eliminating backlash when the slider direction reverses. On a cheap dial caliper with a worn or poorly-designed spring, you can feel the backlash when you close the jaws — the dial pointer drifts back slightly as you let off pressure. On a quality instrument (Mitutoyo, Starrett, Brown & Sharpe), the dial movement tracks the slider with no perceptible backlash.
Dial caliper anatomy — the parts that matter
A dial caliper has eight functional components. Understanding what each one does is essential for both correct use and recognising wear or damage that affects accuracy.
| Part | Function | What to watch for |
|---|---|---|
| Outside-measurement jaws | Lower jaws that close against the outside of a workpiece (diameter, thickness, width) | Wear at the jaw tips — measured features will read undersized. Bent jaws from impact cause systematic error |
| Inside-measurement jaws | Upper, knife-edge jaws that expand against the inside of a hole, slot or groove | Knife edges are easily damaged. A damaged inside jaw makes ID measurement unreliable |
| Depth rod | Thin rod that extends from the back end of the beam as the slider opens, measures hole depth and step heights | Bent depth rods are common after the caliper has been dropped. Check it is straight before depth measurement |
| Main scale (beam) | Engraved graduations along the beam showing whole inches and tenths (or millimetres) | Scale corrosion or paint wear on cheap calipers makes reading harder. Quality instruments use hardened, satin-chromed beam scales |
| Dial face | Rotating analog face showing the thousandths or hundredths of the measurement | Dust under the crystal, scratched crystal, damaged pointer all interfere with reading. Crystal should be glass on premium instruments, polycarbonate on workshop tier |
| Bezel (rotating dial face surround) | Lets you rotate the dial face to zero against the slider position | Bezel should rotate firmly with detents on quality instruments. Loose bezel that moves accidentally during use is a serious problem |
| Thumb roller | Knurled wheel under the slider that lets you advance the slider with one finger | Should turn smoothly with no grit. Practical Machinist threads describe a gritty thumb roller as one of the first signs of a counterfeit Mitutoyo |
| Lock screw | Small knurled screw that clamps the slider in position | Tighten gently — over-tightening damages the lock screw threads and can distort the slider |
One feature competitors often skip: the relief grind at the base of the jaws. On a genuine Mitutoyo dial caliper, the relief grind at the base of the outside-measurement jaws is intentionally unequal between the two jaws — the upper jaw has a different relief profile to the lower jaw. This is a manufacturing signature that counterfeit clones do not replicate (clones have perfectly matching relief grinds on both jaws). Practical Machinist threads document this as one of the most reliable counterfeit-spotting tests, covered in the dedicated counterfeit-warning section below.
How to read a dial caliper — step by step
The reading procedure is the same in metric and imperial; only the graduation values change. The fundamental rule is: read the main scale first, read the dial second, add them together. Get this in the right order and the reading falls out cleanly. Do it backwards and you risk misreading the main scale.
Imperial dial caliper reading procedure (0.001 inch resolution)
On a typical imperial dial caliper, the main scale on the beam is graduated in whole inches with subdivisions at 0.1 inch (every tenth of an inch). The dial face has 100 graduations representing 0.001 inch each, and one full revolution of the pointer equals 0.100 inch — exactly one major main-scale division.
Step 1 — close the jaws on the workpiece firmly but not heavily. Use the thumb roller, not finger pressure on the slider itself. Heavy pressure flexes the jaws and gives undersized readings.
Step 2 — read the main scale. Look at the reference edge of the slider (the edge that crosses the main scale closest to the dial). Note the last whole inch and the last 0.1-inch mark that the reference edge has passed. For example, if the slider sits between the 1.3 and 1.4 inch marks, the main scale reading is 1.3 inches.
Step 3 — read the dial. Note the graduation the pointer rests on. If the pointer is at 45, the dial reading is 0.045 inch.
Step 4 — add the main scale reading and the dial reading. 1.3 inches plus 0.045 inch equals 1.345 inches. That is your measurement.
Metric dial caliper reading procedure (0.02 mm resolution)
On a typical metric dial caliper, the main scale is graduated in millimetres (every 1 mm) with major marks every 10 mm. The dial face has 50 graduations representing 0.02 mm each, and one full revolution equals 1 mm. (Some premium metric dial calipers use 100 graduations of 0.01 mm with one revolution per 1 mm — check the dial face before use.)
Step 1 — close the jaws, read the main scale at the slider reference edge. Note the last whole millimetre passed. If the slider is between 27 and 28, the main scale reading is 27 mm.
Step 2 — read the dial. If the pointer is at the 36 graduation on a 50-division dial (0.02 mm per division), the dial reading is 0.72 mm.
Step 3 — add. 27 mm plus 0.72 mm equals 27.72 mm.
The interpolation rule competitors miss
Dial caliper resolution is not the same as accuracy. A dial caliper graduated to 0.001 inch will read in 0.001-inch increments — but its actual accuracy under JIS B 7507:2022 is plus or minus 0.001 inch over a 6-inch range (or plus or minus 0.02 mm over a 150 mm metric range). You can interpolate between dial graduations by eye for an additional half-division of resolution, but that interpolated reading is meaningless beyond the instrument's certified accuracy. Treat the smallest graduation as the practical limit of the measurement.
The other discipline practitioners on Home Shop Machinist BBS emphasise: always zero-check before measuring. Close the jaws fully (no workpiece between them), confirm the dial pointer rests on exactly 0 (not 1, not 99 — exactly 0), and confirm the main scale reference edge sits on exactly 0 on the beam. If either is off, rotate the bezel to bring the dial to zero, or adjust the dial mechanism (manufacturer-specific procedure) before taking your measurement. A caliper that does not zero is reading offset across its entire range.
How to take the four types of measurements with a dial caliper
A dial caliper is one of the most versatile instruments on any workbench — but a lot of users only ever close the big lower jaws around a shaft or bolt and never touch the other three measurement capabilities. The dial face is the visible difference between a dial and a vernier or digital caliper, but the four measurement points are physically identical across all three types — same jaws, same depth rod, same step measurement back faces. Knowing when to reach for each one is the difference between owning a dial caliper and actually using it properly.
① Outside diameter / width — the main lower jaws
The large lower jaws are what most people picture when they think "caliper". Close them around the outside of a part to measure outer diameter, thickness, or width. Light, consistent pressure — don't squeeze hard. Keep the jaw faces parallel to the measurement plane and don't rock or tilt the caliper. The dial needle moves smoothly in real time; lock the slider once you have firm jaw contact and read the dial.
Typical uses: shaft outside diameter, bolt diameter, bar stock, plate thickness, tube OD, dowel pins, gauge stock, and any external dimension on a finished part. This is the go-to measurement for receiving inspection of round and flat stock, fastener verification, and tolerance checks on machined ODs.
② Inside diameter / bore — the upper knife-edge jaws
The smaller upper jaws face outward — open them inside a hole, bore, slot or groove until both edges make light contact with the walls. The jaws must be centred in the bore. Rock the caliper gently across the diameter to find the true maximum reading — that's the actual bore size; any smaller reading means the jaws aren't fully on the centre line. The dial caliper's smooth analog needle motion makes the rocking-for-peak technique particularly easy to feel and see.
Most dial calipers handle the geometry offset internally, so the dial shows the true inside dimension directly without manual addition. Verify by closing the jaws and confirming the needle points to zero at the closed position; rotate the bezel to zero if needed.
Typical uses: bore ID, hole diameter, slot width, groove width, pipe ID, bushing inside diameter, threaded hole minor diameter, machined recesses.
One practical application worth knowing: measuring the bore at a drill press or lathe spindle face with the inside jaws is the most reliable way to identify a Morse taper number when no markings are visible. MT bore diameters from MT0 to MT7 are distinct and non-overlapping, making a single caliper measurement enough to confirm the taper size. See our Morse taper guide for the full dimension table and identification method.
③ Depth measurement — the depth rod
A thin rod (sometimes called a depth blade or depth bar) extends from the tail of the caliper body as the jaws open. To measure depth, rest the flat beam end on the reference surface over the hole or slot, then slide the depth rod down until it touches the bottom. Keep the beam perfectly level across the reference surface — any tilt introduces cosine error and gives a depth reading slightly longer than the true value. Read the dial directly.
For blind holes, ensure the depth rod tip is actually touching the bottom of the hole, not resting on a chip or burr — this is a frequent source of error in workshop measurements. A quick visual or a gentle wiggle confirms the tip has reached the floor.
Typical uses: drilled hole depth, counterbore depth, blind tapped hole depth, slot depth, recess depth, machined pocket depth, threaded hole reach for bolt length selection.
④ Step / shoulder measurement — the flat back faces of the lower jaws
This is the measurement point most users never realise their caliper can do. The flat back faces of the lower jaws can measure the height difference between two parallel surfaces — like a step or shoulder on a turned part, a milled feature with a height transition, or any raised feature on a flat reference surface. Often overlooked, but genuinely useful on machined components.
To take a step measurement, place the back face of the fixed lower jaw flat on the lower (reference) surface, then slide the moving jaw across until its back face contacts the upper surface. The dial reading is the step height. The technique varies slightly by caliper design — some have explicitly machined step-measurement surfaces, others use the back of the lower jaws less precisely. Consult the manual for your specific caliper if precision matters.
Typical uses: shoulder height on turned parts, step depth on milled features, ledge measurement on machined housings, raised boss height, gasket-face step on flanges.
Pro tip — always zero the dial before measuring. Close the jaws fully and lock the slider. Check that the needle points to zero on the dial face. If it doesn't, rotate the rotating bezel until the needle aligns with the zero mark (no battery, no button, no encoder — just bezel rotation). Even a small offset (0.05 mm or so) compounds quickly when you're checking tolerance fits — a Grade 8.8 bolt seated in a clearance hole, an H7 shaft in an H7 bore, or a Morse taper bore identification all turn on tenths of a millimetre. Two seconds of zeroing is the cheapest measurement insurance you'll buy all day.
Dial caliper accuracy and tolerance — JIS B 7507:2022
Dial caliper accuracy is defined internationally by the Japanese Industrial Standard JIS B 7507:2022 (Geometrical Product Specifications, Dimensional Measuring Equipment — Vernier, Dial and Digital Callipers), which superseded the 2016 edition. Despite being a Japanese standard, JIS B 7507 is the de facto global reference for caliper specifications because of Mitutoyo's market dominance — Mitutoyo helped develop the standard, and almost every quality caliper manufacturer in the world cites JIS B 7507 compliance in product literature. The European equivalent is DIN 862. There is no Australian Standard specific to calipers; AU industry uses JIS B 7507 as the reference.
The standard sets maximum permissible errors (MPE) based on measurement range. A typical 0–150 mm metric dial caliper specified to JIS B 7507:2022 has the following accuracy limits:
| Measurement range | Maximum permissible error (metric) | Maximum permissible error (imperial) |
|---|---|---|
| 0–100 mm / 0–4 inch | ±0.02 mm | ±0.001 inch |
| 100–200 mm / 4–8 inch | ±0.03 mm | ±0.0015 inch |
| 200–300 mm / 8–12 inch | ±0.04 mm | ±0.002 inch |
| 300–600 mm / 12–24 inch | ±0.05 mm | ±0.0025 inch |
Two practical implications follow. First, a dial caliper is not the right tool for measurements that need to be reliable to better than 0.02 mm or 0.001 inch — for that level, you step up to a micrometer, which under ISO 3611 is specified to about ±0.002 mm over a 25 mm range. Second, MPE applies to the whole instrument including the jaws, the slider, the rack, the pinion and the dial mechanism — not just the encoder. A dial caliper that has been dropped and developed a small bend in the depth rod or a chip in the rack will exceed its MPE even though every other component appears fine.
One nuance the JIS B 7507 standard makes clear: the accuracy specification assumes the instrument has been calibrated, zero-checked at the time of measurement, and is being used at 20 degrees Celsius (the standard metrology reference temperature). At 30 degrees Celsius on a warm summer day in a Sydney workshop, a 600 mm dial caliper will read approximately 0.07 mm long due to thermal expansion of the beam alone — outside its MPE for that range. Critical measurements should be made on a temperature-stabilised inspection plate, not on a hot machine.
Dial vs vernier vs digital — when each one wins
The three caliper types are not interchangeable for every task. The right choice depends on the work environment, the measurement volume and the operator. Practitioner consensus across Practical Machinist, Hobby-Machinist and Sawmill Creek breaks down as follows.
| Choose this | When | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Vernier caliper | Trade training, hostile electronics environments (extreme cold or heat, dirty wet conditions), very bright outdoor light that washes out an LCD, remote field work where batteries cannot be replaced reliably | No moving parts beyond the slider — the most robust of the three types. Wide tolerance for abuse. Reading is unaffected by temperature, light, batteries or electromagnetic interference |
| Dial caliper | General workshop bench work, comparative measurement (checking parts against a reference), no-electronics requirement, fast analog read, training fitters who have outgrown vernier but need to understand the underlying scale | Fastest of the three to read for the trained user. No batteries to die mid-job. Analog dial gives an instant visual feel for whether a measurement is high or low. Mechanical reliability if cared for |
| Digital caliper | High-volume inspection, batch measurement (using ABS/INC modes), mm/imperial toggling work, statistical process control with data output, operators not trained on scale reading | Lowest skill floor — point and read. Mm/imperial toggle removes conversion errors. Data output (Mitutoyo Digimatic, Bluetooth) feeds SPC systems and saves rekeying. ABS mode preserves a calibrated zero while INC mode lets you batch-measure features against a temporary zero |
The Practical Machinist consensus on serious workshops keeping all three of these tools is documented across multiple threads. A vernier sits in the toolbox for the field jobs and for when the electronics gives up. A dial sits at the bench for general fitting work and for the comparative measurements where the analog feel matters. A digital sits at the inspection table for QC, where the data output and the speed both matter. For new buyers in 2026 with only one slot, the digital caliper has become the workshop default — but practitioners who have been measuring for decades and have outgrown the vernier will still reach for the dial first on bench work that does not need data logging.
Where the dial wins outright over both alternatives: comparative measurement. If you are checking 100 parts against a master, you set the dial to zero on the master, then measure each part — the dial reading is the deviation from the master. Vernier and digital can do this conceptually, but the dial reads it at a glance. The pointer position tells you in tenths of a second whether the part is over, under or on size. This is the application where Mitutoyo dial calipers remain the benchmark choice on inspection benches around the world.
Mitutoyo dial calipers — the industry benchmark
Mitutoyo Corporation, founded in Japan in 1934, is the largest precision measuring instrument manufacturer in the world. Its dial caliper range is the global benchmark against which other dial calipers are measured. On Practical Machinist threads where machinists with decades of experience debate the best dial caliper, the answer almost always reduces to Mitutoyo first, Starrett second, Brown & Sharpe third — with everything else considered workshop-tier rather than precision-tier.
The Mitutoyo dial caliper range that matters for AU industrial users:
- Mitutoyo Series 505 (M-type dial calipers) — the workhorse Mitutoyo dial caliper. 0–150 mm and 0–200 mm metric ranges with 0.02 mm graduations, 0–6 inch and 0–8 inch imperial with 0.001 inch graduations. The 505 series is the most-recognised Mitutoyo dial caliper globally and the one referenced as the benchmark across machinist forums.
- Mitutoyo Series 505 Long Range — 0–300 mm and 0–600 mm versions for larger work. The mechanism scales beautifully — the long-range dial calipers maintain JIS B 7507 accuracy across the full travel because Mitutoyo's rack-cutting tolerances are tight enough to prevent the cumulative pitch error that destroys cheaper long-range calipers.
- Mitutoyo Series 209 long-jaw dial calipers — extended jaws for measuring inside features at depth (deep counterbores, recessed holes).
- Mitutoyo Series 573 inside-groove dial calipers — specialty jaws for measuring inside groove widths.
What makes a Mitutoyo dial caliper measurably different from a workshop-tier alternative is the precision of the rack and pinion mechanism. Mitutoyo cuts its rack gears on dedicated machines to tolerances roughly an order of magnitude tighter than what a generic dial caliper manufacturer uses. The result is that the dial pointer tracks the slider with no perceptible backlash, the mechanism does not skip when chips work into the rack (within reason — no caliper is immune to gross abuse), and the dial reading remains accurate across the full travel rather than drifting in the middle of the range. Practitioners who have used both a Mitutoyo and a cheap dial caliper describe the difference as immediately obvious in the feel.
The trade-off is price. A Mitutoyo 505 dial caliper costs many times what a workshop-tier Dasqua or generic-brand dial caliper costs. For trade school students, weekend hobby machinists or fitters on routine maintenance work where the measurements are not safety-critical, the Dasqua tier at AIMS is enough. For toolroom work, inspection benches, quality lab use, prototype development or any measurement that has tolerance implications on safety-critical parts, the Mitutoyo investment pays back through accuracy, longevity (a quality-cared-for Mitutoyo will outlast its owner) and resale value.
⚠️ The counterfeit Mitutoyo problem — and how to spot a fake in 30 seconds
Counterfeit Mitutoyo calipers and micrometers flood eBay, Amazon, AliExpress and grey-market sellers in numbers that dwarf the genuine market. Practical Machinist threads catalogue the problem in depth, with one direct quote summarising the situation: "Mitutoyo digital calipers are well known to be counterfeit clones, appearing in large numbers on eBay and with other crooked online sellers." The counterfeit problem extends to dial calipers, micrometers, dial indicators and the broader Mitutoyo product line. Mitutoyo Corporation maintains an official page on spotting counterfeits because the problem is that pervasive.
The economics drive the counterfeit market. A genuine Mitutoyo dial caliper from an authorised distributor is many times the price of a workshop-tier alternative. A counterfeit Mitutoyo on eBay or Amazon is often priced at workshop-tier rates — sometimes cheaper. To the unwary buyer this looks like a bargain. In reality the buyer is getting an unbranded workshop-tier caliper with a forged Mitutoyo logo, a forged serial number, a generic plastic case, and no warranty, no calibration certificate and no recourse. The counterfeit may still be a functional measuring tool — but it is not a Mitutoyo, and the measurements it produces should never be treated as Mitutoyo-grade.
The deliberate misspellings are a hallmark of the trade. Practical Machinist threads catalogue Amazon listings for "Mitutogo", "MITU-tyo", "Mituttoyo", "Mito_tuyo" and other variants designed to slip past Mitutoyo's trademark enforcement while still attracting the keyword search traffic. If the spelling on the box does not exactly match Mitutoyo, it is not a Mitutoyo. There are no exceptions. Mitutoyo does not produce sub-brands or variants under altered spellings.
The five-check spot-the-fake procedure
Practical Machinist and Home Shop Machinist BBS practitioners have catalogued five physical tells that distinguish a genuine Mitutoyo from a counterfeit. Run all five before treating any Mitutoyo as authentic, regardless of where it was purchased:
| Check | Genuine Mitutoyo | Counterfeit |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Jaw lateral wiggle | Jaws are tight to the slider with no perceptible lateral movement when you wiggle the upper jaw from side to side | Jaws can be wiggled laterally approximately 1 mm — the slop is immediately obvious. This is the most reliable single test |
| 2. Thumb roller feel | Thumb roller rotates with a smooth, slightly heavy, glass-like feel. No grit, no skipping | Thumb roller has a gritty, hesitant feel. Sometimes catches and releases as it rotates |
| 3. "Made in Japan" stamp | Plastic case has "Made in Japan" clearly stamped or printed on the underside | Case underside has no country-of-origin marking, or has a sticker (not moulded text) that is easily peeled off |
| 4. Relief grind at jaw base | The relief grind at the base of the outside-measurement jaws is intentionally unequal between upper and lower jaws — this is a manufacturing signature | Relief grinds at the jaw base match each other perfectly. Counterfeiters do not reproduce the asymmetry |
| 5. Serial number quality | Serial number is crisply etched, centred, in the correct Mitutoyo font, and matches Mitutoyo's serial number format for the model | Serial number is often fuzzy, off-centre, in the wrong font, or appears to have been added later. Genuine Mitutoyo numbers are stamped during manufacturing, not retroactively |
One additional check practitioners flag for high-value purchases: the packaging. A genuine Mitutoyo dial caliper ships with a Mitutoyo-branded plastic case, a Mitutoyo calibration inspection certificate (with traceable serial number), a Mitutoyo instruction sheet in multiple languages, and Mitutoyo-branded accessories where applicable. Counterfeits typically ship in a generic plastic case with no documentation, or with photocopied documentation that does not match Mitutoyo's printing standards. If the calibration certificate is missing or looks photocopied, the caliper is almost certainly not authentic.
The single safest defence against counterfeits is to buy only from authorised Mitutoyo distributors. In Australia, that means buying from the authorised supply chain explained in the next section — not from eBay, Amazon Marketplace, AliExpress or grey-market sellers regardless of the listing's claims about authenticity.
Authorised Mitutoyo supply in Australia — buying genuine product
The single safest defence against counterfeit Mitutoyo dial calipers is to buy only from authorised Australian distributors. Mitutoyo maintains an authorised distributor network in Australia for its precision measuring tools — calipers, micrometers, dial indicators, gauge blocks, height gauges, depth gauges and the rest of the small-tools range. Anything sold under the Mitutoyo name in Australia that is genuine and warranty-backed will have come through this authorised channel. Anything sold under the Mitutoyo name that did not come through an authorised distributor should be treated with the same scepticism as an eBay listing — including stock found at consumer-tier retail.
For capital-equipment Mitutoyo products — Coordinate Measuring Machines (CMMs), Vision Measuring Systems, Hardness Testing Systems, Form Measuring Machines, Profile Projectors and similar — buyers can purchase either directly from Mitutoyo Asia Pacific or through an authorised distributor. Either path leads to authorised, warranty-backed equipment with full calibration documentation.
AIMS sources Mitutoyo through our authorised supply chain
AIMS Industrial supplies Mitutoyo precision measuring tools through our authorised supply chain. The Mitutoyo dial calipers, digital calipers, micrometers, indicators and other small tools we supply are guaranteed-genuine, Japan-manufactured, Mitutoyo-warranty-backed instruments. No counterfeit risk, no grey-market exposure, no questions about provenance.
AIMS is in the process of bringing the Mitutoyo small-tools range into our online store. Until that range is fully loaded with Shopify product pages, Mitutoyo dial calipers and the rest of the precision measuring range are available on request — contact the AIMS team on (02) 9773 0122 or via the contact page for current availability, model selection advice, lead times and quotation. We can supply any Mitutoyo small tool you can specify, sourced through our authorised supply chain, with the manufacturer warranty intact and the calibration inspection certificate included.
For Mitutoyo capital equipment (CMMs, Vision Systems, Hardness Testing Systems, Profile Projectors, Surface Roughness Testers, Roundness Testers, portable hardness testers, laser scan micrometers and other capital-investment Mitutoyo products), AIMS does not directly distribute these product classes, but our sales team can quote on adjacent tooling, consumables and inspection accessories that pair with these instruments. If you are evaluating Mitutoyo capital equipment, contact our team and we will route you to the correct purchasing channel and help with the surrounding accessory package.
Dial caliper vulnerabilities — rack-and-pinion failure modes
Every measurement type has a characteristic failure mode. For digital calipers it is electronic failure (encoder drift, battery exhaustion, moisture ingress). For vernier calipers it is scale wear and reading error. For dial calipers it is the rack-and-pinion mechanism — specifically, two failure modes that practitioners on Practical Machinist and Home Shop Machinist BBS describe in detail across hundreds of threads.
Failure mode 1 — chips in the rack causing dial skip
If a metal chip, grinding particle, or sawdust grain works into the rack teeth on the underside of the beam, it disrupts the rack-pinion mesh. The slider continues to move because the slider itself is not constrained by the rack — the rack only drives the dial mechanism. But the pinion gear inside the dial housing either skips over the obstruction (jumping the dial reading) or grinds the obstruction into the rack teeth (damaging the rack permanently). The visible symptom is that the jaws move smoothly but the dial pointer either jumps unexpectedly or stops moving while the slider continues.
This is described in practitioner threads as dial skip and it makes the caliper unreliable until the rack is cleaned. Cleaning is non-trivial — the rack is on the underside of the beam, covered by the slider, and accessing it usually requires disassembly. On a quality dial caliper this is a repairable problem with care. On a cheap dial caliper where the rack is soft or the gear train has been over-stressed, the skip event often deforms the rack teeth and the instrument becomes permanently inaccurate.
The defence is simple: never lay a dial caliper down on a surface that has metal chips, grinding swarf, sawdust or any other particulate contamination. Always store the caliper in its case when not in use. Wipe the beam and the underside of the slider with a clean rag before measuring after the caliper has been on a workshop bench. The Tra-Cal calibration laboratory's care-and-maintenance guidance is explicit on this point — dial calipers laid in workshop debris fail within months, while the same instrument cared for in a case lasts decades.
Failure mode 2 — closing the jaws on debris and damaging the measurement faces
If a metal chip, sand grain or other hard particle is sitting on the measurement face of the outside-measurement jaws when you close them, the chip is ground into the jaw face. Quality dial calipers have hardened jaw faces — but hardened is not infinitely hard, and a sharp chip closed under pressure will mark the face. Over time, repeated incidents create pits, scratches and high spots on the measurement face that make the jaws non-flat. From that point on, every measurement made with that caliper is offset by the height of the worst high spot — and the offset is not constant across the jaw face, so the error varies depending on where on the jaw the workpiece sits.
The defence is again simple but disciplined: before every measurement, wipe both measurement faces with a clean rag. Inspect the workpiece for chips before closing the jaws on it. If you are measuring a freshly-machined surface, blow it off with compressed air or wipe it with a rag before bringing the caliper to it. This is the discipline that separates fitters whose calipers stay accurate for decades from fitters whose calipers need replacement every couple of years.
Failure mode 3 — dropping the caliper
The rack-and-pinion mechanism is mechanically delicate. Dropping a dial caliper onto a hard floor — concrete, metal benchtop, machine bed — can damage the rack, bend the depth rod, knock the pinion out of mesh, or distort the beam. Sometimes the damage is visible (the depth rod is bent, the dial pointer no longer tracks smoothly). Often it is invisible — the caliper looks fine but no longer reads accurately.
After any drop, even if the caliper looks undamaged, run a zero check (close the jaws fully and confirm the dial reads zero) and run a range check against a known gauge block or standard ring at multiple positions across the travel. If the caliper fails either check, take it out of service for repair or replacement. Using a dropped dial caliper that has not been validated is a recipe for accepting parts that fail dimensional inspection downstream.
Care, storage and zero-check procedure
Proper care of a dial caliper is straightforward but not negotiable. The care discipline determines whether a quality instrument lasts decades or becomes inaccurate within a couple of years.
- Always close the jaws before storage. Open jaws expose the inside measurement edges to damage and let dust into the rack. Close them to within a millimetre or so of contact (do not slam them shut), then engage the lock screw lightly to keep them positioned.
- Always store in the case. The case keeps the caliper away from chips, grit, dust and impact. Never store a dial caliper loose in a toolbox drawer with other tools that can bang against it.
- Wipe the beam and slider underside before measuring. Even a clean-looking benchtop accumulates particulate that can be picked up on the rack. A quick wipe with a clean rag (no oil, no solvent) before measuring extends instrument life dramatically.
- Wipe the measurement faces before each measurement. The discipline of wiping both faces before bringing them to a workpiece prevents the slow accumulation of damage that makes a caliper inaccurate.
- Zero-check before measurement. Close the jaws fully, confirm the dial pointer rests on exactly zero, confirm the main scale reference edge sits at zero. If either is off, correct it (rotate the bezel to zero the dial) before measuring. A caliper that does not zero is reading offset across its entire range.
- Do not over-tighten the lock screw. Light pressure to hold position is enough. Over-tightening damages the screw threads and can distort the slider.
- Never use the caliper as a marking gauge. Calipers are measuring instruments, not scribing tools. Using the jaws to mark a line on workpiece damages the jaw edges and destroys measurement accuracy.
- Keep oil off the rack. Some oils on the rack attract dust and accelerate wear. A thin film of light instrument oil on the slider and beam is fine; heavy oil or grease is not.
- Schedule periodic calibration. For inspection-grade use, dial calipers should be checked against gauge blocks at multiple points across the range annually (or more often for high-volume use). For routine workshop use, an annual check is reasonable.
The Tra-Cal calibration laboratory's published care guidance reduces to one principle that practitioners repeat across forums: respect the instrument. A quality dial caliper is a precision measuring tool that costs significantly more than a workshop-tier alternative because the manufacturing tolerances are tighter. Treating it like a precision instrument — case, wipe, zero-check, calibrate — extends its working life from years to decades. Treating it as just another tool — loose in a drawer, never wiped, never checked — wastes the investment within months.
Dial caliper sizing — imperial and metric ranges
Dial calipers are produced in a standard range of sizes. The right choice depends on the largest dimension you regularly measure plus a margin — but going significantly larger than you need adds bulk, weight and cost without benefit.
| Range | Best for | Trade-off |
|---|---|---|
| 0–100 mm / 0–4 inch | Tight-quarters work, pocket carry, jewellery / electronics, very small fabrication | Limited to small workpieces. Most workshops want at least the next size up |
| 0–150 mm / 0–6 inch | The default workshop size. Covers most fastener, fitting, machined-part and fabrication work | Slightly limiting on larger parts but the standard general-purpose choice |
| 0–200 mm / 0–8 inch | Larger fabrication, automotive, general engineering work where the 150 mm is occasionally short | Slightly heavier and bulkier than 150 mm — but a useful upgrade for general workshop use |
| 0–300 mm / 0–12 inch | Heavy fabrication, large machined parts, structural work, mining and earthmoving components | Noticeably heavier. Cumulative pitch error in the rack becomes a real factor — buy a quality brand for this size |
| 0–600 mm / 0–24 inch | Very large fabrication, ship building, civil structural, oversize machined parts | Heavy. Long-range dial calipers magnify any rack pitch error. Almost exclusively a Mitutoyo or Starrett purchase at this size |
For Australian workshop users the 0–150 mm metric range is the overwhelming default first purchase. It covers most fastener and machined-part work, fits the case in a toolbox, and is the size manufactured by every quality brand. A second purchase, if needed, is the 0–300 mm range for the longer measurements that occasionally come up — that combination covers about 95 percent of general fitting and fabrication work without needing to swap calipers mid-job.
Common dial caliper mistakes and how to avoid them
| Mistake | Why it matters | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Not zero-checking before measurement | A caliper that reads 0.001 inch high at zero reads everything 0.001 inch high | Close jaws fully, confirm dial reads exactly zero, rotate bezel if needed |
| Pressing the slider with finger force on the slider body | Flexes the slider and gives undersized readings on outside measurement | Use the thumb roller — it gives consistent, repeatable measuring pressure |
| Closing the jaws on debris | Damages the measurement faces permanently. Slow accumulation makes the caliper non-flat | Wipe both faces before every measurement. Inspect the workpiece for chips first |
| Laying the caliper in workshop debris | Chips, grit and dust work into the rack and cause dial skip | Always return the caliper to its case when not in immediate use |
| Reading the dial without checking the main scale first | The dial reading is added to the main scale reading. Reading dial alone misses the whole-inch or whole-millimetre part | Always read main scale first, dial second, add them together |
| Misreading the main scale by one major division | 0.100 inch error or 1 mm error in the reading — usually catastrophic for fit-up work | Read the main scale reference edge carefully. The dial wraps every 0.100 inch or 1 mm — that wrap is your cue to re-check the main scale |
| Treating dial reading as accuracy | Resolution (0.001 inch graduation) is not the same as accuracy (±0.001 inch MPE). Interpolating between graduations adds noise, not signal | Treat the smallest dial graduation as the practical limit of the measurement |
| Using the caliper as a scribing tool | Damages the jaw edges. From that point on, all inside-measurement readings are unreliable | Calipers are measuring tools, not marking tools. Use a scriber for marking |
| Measuring on a hot workpiece | Thermal expansion of both the workpiece and the caliper itself introduces meaningful error | Let the workpiece cool to room temperature, or measure on a temperature-stabilised inspection plate |
| Buying a counterfeit Mitutoyo at workshop-tier price | You get an unbranded workshop-tier caliper with a forged logo, no warranty, no certificate, no provenance | Buy only from authorised Mitutoyo distributors. AIMS sources Mitutoyo through our authorised supply chain. Run the five-check spot-the-fake procedure on any Mitutoyo of uncertain origin |
AIMS dial caliper range — Dasqua and Mitutoyo via authorised supply
AIMS Industrial supplies dial calipers across two tiers: workshop-tier Dasqua (stocked at AIMS, available immediately from our dial calipers collection) and premium-tier Mitutoyo (available through AIMS via our authorised supply chain, sourced on request through our sales team).
Workshop tier — Dasqua dial calipers
Dasqua is a workshop-tier precision measuring instrument brand widely stocked across Australia. The dial calipers offer JIS B 7507-class accuracy at a price point that suits trade school students, hobby machinists, general fabricators and maintenance fitters whose measurements are not safety-critical. AIMS stocks two Dasqua dial caliper models:
- Dasqua Dial Caliper – Metric — 0–150 mm range, 0.02 mm dial graduations, hardened stainless steel construction, supplied in a fitted plastic case.
- Dasqua Dial Caliper – Imperial — 0–6 inch range, 0.001 inch dial graduations, hardened stainless steel construction, supplied in a fitted plastic case.
The Dasqua tier is the right answer when you need a working dial caliper that delivers reliable workshop-grade accuracy without the Mitutoyo investment. For trade training, weekend hobby use, general fabrication and routine fitting work, the Dasqua tier holds its accuracy with reasonable care and is a cost-effective entry to dial caliper measurement.
Premium tier — Mitutoyo dial calipers via authorised supply chain
For toolroom work, inspection benches, quality lab use, prototype development and safety-critical measurements where the Mitutoyo accuracy and longevity justify the premium investment, AIMS supplies the full Mitutoyo dial caliper range through our authorised supply chain. The range covers the Series 505 M-type workhorses (0–150 mm to 0–300 mm in metric, 0–6 inch to 0–12 inch imperial), Series 505 long-range to 0–600 mm, Series 209 long-jaw models for deep inside measurement, and Series 573 inside-groove specialty models.
Because the Mitutoyo small-tools range is in the process of being loaded into the AIMS online store, the simplest path today is to call our team on (02) 9773 0122 with the Mitutoyo model number you need (or describe the application) and we will quote with current availability and lead time. Every Mitutoyo dial caliper supplied through AIMS comes through our authorised supply chain with the Mitutoyo manufacturer warranty intact and the calibration inspection certificate included.
Brands AIMS does not currently stock for dial calipers
Starrett dial calipers, Brown & Sharpe dial calipers and similar US-origin premium brands are not currently stocked at AIMS. For these specific brand requests, our sales team can advise on the closest Mitutoyo or Dasqua equivalent that we can supply, or refer you to a specialist supplier. For Bunnings consumer-tier dial calipers and supermarket-tier digital calipers, AIMS is not the right channel — those audiences are better served by consumer retail.
Selection checklist by application
| Application | Recommended tier | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Trade school / apprentice training | Dasqua workshop tier, 0–150 mm metric | Cost-effective, robust enough for learning, JIS B 7507-class accuracy, fits a tool roll |
| General fitting / maintenance / fabrication | Dasqua workshop tier, 0–150 mm or 0–200 mm | Reliable workshop accuracy for routine work where measurements are not safety-critical |
| Automotive maintenance and repair | Dasqua workshop tier, 0–150 mm metric (most AU vehicles) | Most automotive measurements are within Dasqua accuracy. Specific applications (brake rotor minimum thickness, valve clearance) may need the Mitutoyo tier |
| CNC machine shop production | Mitutoyo Series 505 via AIMS authorised supply, 0–150 mm | Production measurement volumes and tighter part tolerances justify Mitutoyo accuracy and longevity |
| Toolroom / prototype / fixture work | Mitutoyo Series 505 via AIMS authorised supply | Toolroom tolerances often require the Mitutoyo accuracy. Hand-feel during careful one-off measurement matters |
| Inspection bench / quality lab | Mitutoyo Series 505 with periodic NATA calibration | Inspection-grade work needs traceable calibration and Mitutoyo-grade accuracy. Annual NATA calibration through an accredited laboratory |
| Large fabrication / mining / structural | Mitutoyo long-range (300 mm or 600 mm) via AIMS authorised supply | Cumulative pitch error in long-range racks demands the Mitutoyo manufacturing standard |
| Field service / remote sites | Dasqua workshop tier with a spare | Field environments are tough on calipers. The Dasqua is replaceable; carry two so a damaged one does not stop the work |
When to choose dial over digital — and when to choose digital
This decision comes up regularly when buyers are spec-ing out a measurement kit. There is no universal right answer; the choice depends on the work pattern.
Choose dial over digital when:
- You take comparative measurements against a master regularly — the dial pointer reads deviation at a glance
- You work in environments where electronics are unreliable — extreme heat, extreme cold, very wet conditions, bright outdoor light that washes out LCDs, or remote field work where batteries cannot be replaced
- You prefer the tactile analog feel — the dial gives a sense of measurement that some practitioners find more intuitive than a digital readout
- You want a tool with no electronic failure modes — no battery to die, no encoder to drift, no LCD to fail
- The work is occasional or low-volume — the lack of mm/imperial toggle on a dial caliper is not a problem if you only measure occasionally
Choose digital over dial when:
- You take high-volume measurements where read speed and operator fatigue matter — digital is the fastest of the three types
- You switch between metric and imperial regularly — the button toggle on a digital removes conversion error
- You need SPC data output to a computer or quality system — the Mitutoyo Digimatic and Bluetooth output options on premium digital calipers
- You work in environments where coolant or water exposure is a concern — IP54 and IP67 coolant-proof digital calipers handle wet conditions better than a dial caliper, where coolant in the rack ruins the mechanism
- Multiple operators share the tool and not all are trained on scale or dial reading
For most Australian workshop buyers in 2026 the answer is "buy both" — a Dasqua dial for bench work and a Dasqua digital for inspection and batch measurement. The cost of the pair is well below the cost of a single Mitutoyo of either type, and the two tools cover different use patterns. For the dedicated CNC inspection bench or quality lab, the premium Mitutoyo digital with IP67 coolant rating handles the wet environments that would compromise a dial caliper. For toolroom and prototype work the Mitutoyo dial remains the bench-side default.
For the digital deep-dive — capacitive encoders, IP54 vs IP67 ratings, Mitutoyo Absolute encoder technology, battery types, data output and digital-specific failure modes — see our companion Digital Caliper Guide. The pair of articles, with this dial caliper guide and the existing Vernier Caliper Guide, covers the AIMS caliper cluster end-to-end.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is a dial caliper?
Under JIS B 7507:2022 (the global standard for vernier, dial and digital calipers), a 0–150 mm metric dial caliper is specified to plus or minus 0.02 mm maximum permissible error across its full range. An imperial 0–6 inch dial caliper is specified to plus or minus 0.001 inch. Larger ranges have wider tolerances — a 300 mm caliper is specified to plus or minus 0.04 mm, and a 600 mm caliper to plus or minus 0.05 mm. The accuracy assumes the instrument is at the reference temperature of 20 degrees Celsius, has been calibrated, and is zero-checked at the time of measurement. A dial caliper is not a substitute for a micrometer when the tolerance is tighter than 0.02 mm or 0.001 inch.
How do you read a dial caliper?
Close the jaws on the workpiece firmly but not heavily using the thumb roller. Read the main scale on the beam at the reference edge of the slider — this gives whole inches plus tenths (or whole millimetres). Read the dial face — the pointer position gives the thousandths (imperial) or hundredths (metric). Add the main scale reading and the dial reading together. For example, on an imperial dial caliper, if the main scale reads 1.3 inches and the dial pointer is at 45, the measurement is 1.345 inches. Always zero-check before measuring by closing the jaws fully and confirming the dial reads exactly zero.
What does each graduation on the dial face mean?
On an imperial dial caliper, each dial graduation typically represents 0.001 inch (one thousandth of an inch), with 100 graduations around the dial and one full revolution equalling 0.100 inch — exactly one major main-scale division. On a metric dial caliper, each graduation typically represents 0.02 mm with 50 graduations around the dial and one revolution equalling 1 mm, or each graduation represents 0.01 mm with 100 graduations and one revolution equalling 1 mm. The exact dial layout is printed on the dial face — always confirm before use, especially when switching between calipers.
What is the difference between a dial caliper and a vernier caliper?
Both use a mechanical slider on a graduated beam to measure outside, inside, depth and step dimensions. The difference is the readout. A vernier caliper requires the operator to read the main scale and then interpret a vernier scale on the slider to extract the fractional part of the measurement. A dial caliper replaces the vernier scale with a rotating dial face driven by a rack-and-pinion mechanism — the operator reads the main scale and the dial pointer, and adds them. Dial calipers are generally faster to read and easier to learn, while vernier calipers are mechanically simpler and more robust to environmental abuse.
What is the difference between a dial caliper and a digital caliper?
Both have the same mechanical structure (sliding jaws on a beam) but different readout mechanisms. A dial caliper uses a rack-and-pinion driving an analog dial face. A digital caliper uses a capacitive encoder driving an LCD display. Dial calipers run without batteries and have no electronics to fail, but the rack-and-pinion mechanism is delicate and can be damaged by chips, dust or impact. Digital calipers are faster to read and offer mm/imperial toggling, ABS/INC modes and data output options, but depend on batteries and can lose zero or drift if low quality. The two types are complements, not substitutes — many serious workshops keep one of each.
Why does my dial caliper jump or skip?
Dial skip is caused by debris in the rack-and-pinion mechanism. A metal chip, grinding particle or sawdust grain has worked into the rack on the underside of the beam, and the pinion gear inside the dial housing is either skipping over the obstruction (causing the pointer to jump) or grinding into it. The slider moves smoothly because it is not constrained by the rack — only the dial mechanism is. The fix is to disassemble the caliper carefully, clean the rack and pinion, and reassemble. Prevention is to keep the caliper away from chips and debris when not in use — always store in its case.
How do I zero a dial caliper?
Close the jaws fully (no workpiece between them) using the thumb roller, not hard finger pressure. The dial pointer should rest on exactly zero. If it does not, rotate the bezel (the rotating ring around the dial face) until the zero mark on the dial face aligns with the pointer. The bezel has light detents to hold it in position. If the dial pointer does not rest on zero with the jaws fully closed and the bezel zeroed, the caliper has a more serious problem — most likely worn or contaminated rack-and-pinion mechanism, bent jaws, or wear at the jaw tips — and should be inspected and serviced before further use.
Are Mitutoyo dial calipers worth the premium?
For trade training, hobby use, general fabrication and routine maintenance where measurements are not safety-critical, the workshop-tier Dasqua range stocked at AIMS gives JIS B 7507-class accuracy at a much lower price point. For toolroom work, inspection benches, quality labs, prototype development, CNC production where part tolerances are tight, and any safety-critical measurement, the Mitutoyo investment pays back through accuracy, longevity (a well-maintained Mitutoyo will outlast its owner), tighter rack-and-pinion tolerances that resist dial skip, and resale value. The Mitutoyo Series 505 is the global benchmark dial caliper.
How do I spot a fake Mitutoyo caliper?
Run the five-check spot-the-fake procedure. First, wiggle the upper jaw laterally — a genuine Mitutoyo has no perceptible lateral movement, a fake will wiggle approximately 1 mm. Second, feel the thumb roller — genuine has a smooth heavy glass-like feel, fakes feel gritty and hesitant. Third, check the case underside for a moulded 'Made in Japan' marking — genuine has it, fakes have no marking or a peelable sticker. Fourth, look at the relief grind at the base of the jaws — genuine Mitutoyo has intentionally unequal relief between upper and lower jaws, fakes have matching grinds. Fifth, inspect the serial number — genuine is crisp, centred and in the correct Mitutoyo font, fakes are often fuzzy or off-centre. Also confirm the spelling is exactly 'Mitutoyo' — variants like 'Mitutogo', 'MITU-tyo' or 'Mituttoyo' are counterfeits.
Where can I buy genuine Mitutoyo in Australia?
Buy only from authorised Australian distributors. Mitutoyo maintains an authorised distributor network in Australia for its precision measuring small tools (calipers, micrometers, dial indicators, gauge blocks, height gauges, depth gauges). For capital equipment (CMMs, Vision Systems, Hardness Testing Systems and similar), buyers can purchase directly from Mitutoyo Asia Pacific or through an authorised distributor. AIMS Industrial sources Mitutoyo through our authorised supply chain — call our team on (02) 9773 0122 to discuss the model you need, and we will quote with current availability and lead time. Every Mitutoyo instrument supplied through AIMS comes with the manufacturer warranty intact and the calibration inspection certificate included. Never buy Mitutoyo from eBay, Amazon Marketplace, AliExpress or grey-market sellers regardless of authenticity claims.
Why is my dial caliper reading inconsistent?
Inconsistent readings usually trace to one of four causes. First, debris on the measurement faces — wipe both faces with a clean rag before each measurement. Second, worn or damaged jaws from a drop or impact — inspect the jaw tips for damage and run a known-gauge-block check across the range. Third, inconsistent measuring pressure from using finger pressure on the slider rather than the thumb roller — always use the thumb roller for repeatable pressure. Fourth, contamination in the rack-and-pinion causing intermittent dial skip — clean the mechanism or service the caliper. If none of these resolves the inconsistency, the caliper needs calibration or replacement.
Can a dial caliper be repaired or recalibrated?
Quality dial calipers (Mitutoyo, Starrett) are designed to be serviceable — the rack-and-pinion can be cleaned, jaws can be lapped, and the instrument can be calibrated against gauge blocks. Mitutoyo offers factory service for its instruments in Australia via authorised channels. Workshop-tier dial calipers (Dasqua and similar) are generally not economically repairable beyond cleaning and zero adjustment — at the workshop-tier price point, a damaged instrument is usually replaced rather than serviced. For calibration of inspection-grade instruments, use a NATA-accredited calibration laboratory and request a calibration certificate with measurement uncertainty stated for each tested point.
What size dial caliper should I buy?
For most Australian workshop and trade buyers, the 0–150 mm metric range (or 0–6 inch imperial) is the default first purchase. It covers most fastener, fitting, machined-part and fabrication work, fits a tool roll, and is the size manufactured by every quality brand. If you regularly measure larger parts, consider 0–200 mm or 0–300 mm as either a replacement or an addition. The 0–600 mm range is specialty equipment for very large fabrication, ship building and structural work — almost exclusively a Mitutoyo or Starrett purchase. Going significantly larger than you need adds weight and bulk without benefit, and increases the impact of cumulative rack pitch error.
What is JIS B 7507:2022?
JIS B 7507:2022 is the current Japanese Industrial Standard for vernier, dial and digital callipers — full title 'Geometrical product specifications (GPS) — Dimensional measuring equipment — Vernier, dial and digital callipers'. It superseded JIS B 7507:2016 (which itself replaced the 1993 edition). The standard specifies maximum permissible error (MPE) by measurement range, design and metrological characteristics, calibration guidelines and conformity assessment. Despite being a Japanese standard, JIS B 7507 is the de facto global reference for caliper specifications because Mitutoyo's market dominance led to its near-universal adoption. The European DIN 862 standard is the equivalent. There is no Australian Standard specific to calipers — AU industry uses JIS B 7507 as the reference.
Is a dial caliper better than digital for shop floor use?
For shop-floor use specifically — a metal-cutting workshop with chips, coolant and grinding swarf around — the answer depends on the digital caliper's IP rating. A standard non-IP-rated digital caliper will fail in this environment within months as coolant works into the electronics. An IP67 coolant-proof digital caliper (Mitutoyo Absolute Coolant Proof) handles the environment well and is generally the better choice. A dial caliper survives short-term shop-floor exposure better than a non-IP-rated digital, but the rack-and-pinion is still vulnerable to chips. For a workshop on a budget, a dial caliper kept in its case between measurements is a reasonable choice. For a workshop willing to invest in an IP67 digital caliper, the digital is better — the IP rating addresses the environmental vulnerability that the dial caliper cannot.
AIMS dial calipers — quick links and contact
Browse the full AIMS dial calipers collection for current Dasqua workshop-tier stock. For Mitutoyo dial calipers sourced through our authorised supply chain, contact the AIMS team on (02) 9773 0122 or via the contact page — let us know the Mitutoyo model number or describe the application, and we will quote with current availability and lead time.
Related AIMS guides: Vernier Caliper Guide · Digital Caliper Guide · Micrometer Guide · Dial Indicator Guide · GD&T Symbols Guide
Cross-reference our V-Belt Measurement guide for classical (A, B, C, D), narrow (SPA, SPB, SPC, SPZ) and FRAS sections.
For micrometer selection (outside, inside, depth, digital, vernier), see our micrometers range.

