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Features:
Gift choices:
You can send these stainless steel drill gauges to your friends, father, relatives, colleagues, neighbors and others who need accurate reading of drill bits, bringing convenience to their work and showing your care.
Practical tools:
With 29 holes, these fractional drill gauges offer a wide range of measurements and right precision, serviceable and useful tools for you to size your bits.
Specifications:
Material: stainless steel
Main color: black
Size: about 6.2 x 2.36 inches
Package includes:
2 x Drill gauges
Notes:
Manual measurement, please allow slight errors on size.
The color may exist a slight difference due to different screen displays.
william
Reviewed in the United States on August 6, 2024
I’ve used them a lot going through my old drill bits and checking sizes on a few screws.Sturdy.
Customer
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2024
I bought some extra ones to give away....Great tool to tell you what size drill to use for the screw you want to use....Being Stainless Steel it should hold up well with a lot of use..
Phil Hennessee
Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2024
Very good product. Very pleased.
Tim Bivens
Reviewed in the United States on December 4, 2024
These are excellent. they are made from high grade stainless steel.
Douglas Erkson
Reviewed in the United States on September 9, 2023
Exactly what you need to check drill bit sizes. Good quality, and you get two one for each side of the shop.
Chuck Volkel
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2023
Well made, priced right
Robert T.
Reviewed in the United States on May 10, 2023
Like the looks and feel of the gauge. Is extremely accurate. Bits fit very tight with play at all. I always measure using the shank of the bit. The right size bit will need a tiny push and be plumb to go if its the correct size but thats called precise. Would recommend.
Ed Kolpropa
Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2022
When I recieved these, I was elated. I had a pile of bits to sort, and some were so small I couldn't read the markings. I started to sort. As I did I noticed I was placing bits in the wrong place when compared to markings I could read. It seems the correct size occurred when I could just barely NOT get the bit through the hole. Its as if they are like .0001" under the actual. Once I started sorting this way, I accurately sorted...basically if the bit would almost pass through the hole..that was the correct size. It was a bit tricky, but it worked.
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