## Abstract This article describes an improved rig for the dynamic calibration of skinfold calipers. The new unit is 5% lighter and almost 60% smaller than its predecessor (Carlyon et al., 1996, 1998) with a 9.5 mm solid aluminium base and a quick release caliper mount providing stability to both t
Apparatus for precision calibration of skinfold calipers
โ Scribed by R. G. Carlyon; R. W. Bryant; C. J. Gore; R. E. Walker
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 203 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1042-0533
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Despite the fact that skinfold calipers are widely used to measure subcutaneous adipose tissue, the current methods of calibration are quite crude. Methods such as hanging masses from the caliper jaws until they remain open, lack validity and reliability because the caliper jaws are stationary instead of dynamic, and the opening jaws give an upscale reading of the jaw gap not a downscale reading that occurs when the calipers are being used to measure skinfolds. This report describes how to build an apparatus capable of measuring static and dynamic, upscale and downscale jaw pressures of a variety of caliper types and also provides guidelines specifically for calibration and servicing of Harpenden calipers. The key areas to maintain are the caliper springs (which should have spring coefficients ranging 1.104-1.153 N.mm ), the pivot joint (which should operate smoothly), the indicator mechanism (which should require only 0.78-0.88 N for full movement), and the jaw alignment which should be square to ensure that the full effective jaw surface area of 90 mm is applied to the skinfold. While there are insufficient data at this time to prescribe rigid calibration criteria, assessment of approximately 100 new and used Harpenden calipers indicates that, after servicing, the important dynamic downscale jaw pressure will range 7.7-8.4 g.mm at 5 mm of jaw gap and 7.3-8.0 g.mm at 40 mm of jaw gap. Dynamic upscale jaw pressure should be within 1.0-1.5 g.mm of the corresponding dynamic downscale jaw pressure. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 10:689-697, 1998. ยฉ 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Electronic calipers, now included as standard in most commercial ultrasonic scanners, are used for a variety of measurements including fetal cephalometry ( 1 ) . They operate by generating two electronic pulses which brighten the A-scan or B-scan display, or both. The position on the time-base at wh
A method using the 'closure principle' is developed for precision calibration of rotary scale errors of gear measurement machines and precision calibration of gear tooth index errors (accumulated tooth-spacing errors) after 'removal' of rotary scale errors. The method uses the standard machine proce