early Hemi
New Member
always better to check it first with sonic, rather than poke and hope
just make sure they calibrate the sonic tester. I can make a wall measuring .050" sonic test at .150" by purposely mis-calibrating the tester
the block has to be measured somewhere with a mechanical gauge, then the sonic tester used on the same spot, then the "calibrate" mode entered on the tester, and the value moved up or down to equal the actual dimension measured with the mechanical gauge.
then the tester checked again
then it's ready to go
if they just grab the gauge and test block after block, regardless of make or material, it's not going to be correct. aluminum, magnesium, cast iron, steel, etc. all have their own velocities to be calibrated for. it's the same type of technology used in the medical field for doing ultrasounds
just make sure they calibrate the sonic tester. I can make a wall measuring .050" sonic test at .150" by purposely mis-calibrating the tester
the block has to be measured somewhere with a mechanical gauge, then the sonic tester used on the same spot, then the "calibrate" mode entered on the tester, and the value moved up or down to equal the actual dimension measured with the mechanical gauge.
then the tester checked again
then it's ready to go
if they just grab the gauge and test block after block, regardless of make or material, it's not going to be correct. aluminum, magnesium, cast iron, steel, etc. all have their own velocities to be calibrated for. it's the same type of technology used in the medical field for doing ultrasounds