What's the use case for a thickness measurement tool in a guitar toolkit?

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I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
thickness measurement tool



The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?



Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.










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    8















    I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
    thickness measurement tool



    The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?



    Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.










    share|improve this question
























      8












      8








      8








      I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
      thickness measurement tool



      The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?



      Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.










      share|improve this question














      I purchased a toolkit specifically designed for guitars, and beside the tools I expected, it contained this:
      thickness measurement tool



      The description lists it as a thickness measurement tool. What thickness would one measure with this on a guitar? Distance between strings and fretboard?



      Googling only gave me results about building guitars from scratch, but the rest of the toolkit is basic stuff like Allen keys and a string winder, so I assume there is some more regular use of that tool.







      guitar maintenance






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      asked Dec 29 '18 at 19:43









      crater2150crater2150

      1433




      1433




















          2 Answers
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          8














          Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.



          If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.






          share|improve this answer























          • With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:28



















          3














          This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.






          share|improve this answer























          • Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

            – crater2150
            Dec 29 '18 at 21:18











          • @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:31











          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
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          active

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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

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          active

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          votes






          active

          oldest

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          8














          Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.



          If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.






          share|improve this answer























          • With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:28
















          8














          Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.



          If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.






          share|improve this answer























          • With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:28














          8












          8








          8







          Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.



          If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.






          share|improve this answer













          Those are called “feeler gauges” and can measure all kinds of things. Distance between strings and the fingerboard or the frets is one common use for them. I just used my set yesterday to measure string height at the nut. Another likely place to use them would be string height above a pickup. You could also measure the height of a floating tremolo bridge above the body.



          If you’re building a guitar, you might want to measure gaps between parts and other small spaces like that.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 30 '18 at 1:15









          Todd WilcoxTodd Wilcox

          33.9k259113




          33.9k259113












          • With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:28


















          • With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:28

















          With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

          – Tim
          Dec 30 '18 at 9:28






          With strings above a pup likely to be 2-3mm, you may need a couple of these sets of feeler gauges! My answer from yesterday never landed. Also be aware that feeler gauges come in two distinct sets - metric (as shown) and imperial - in 'thous' - thousands of an inch. Which is how most strings are considered, coming from the States. Not that feeler gauges are any good for measuring strings - I use a set of caliper gauges. - in 1/1000".

          – Tim
          Dec 30 '18 at 9:28












          3














          This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.






          share|improve this answer























          • Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

            – crater2150
            Dec 29 '18 at 21:18











          • @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:31
















          3














          This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.






          share|improve this answer























          • Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

            – crater2150
            Dec 29 '18 at 21:18











          • @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:31














          3












          3








          3







          This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.






          share|improve this answer













          This is for measuring the thickness of the nut slot.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Dec 29 '18 at 20:08









          b3kob3ko

          3,531917




          3,531917












          • Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

            – crater2150
            Dec 29 '18 at 21:18











          • @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:31


















          • Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

            – crater2150
            Dec 29 '18 at 21:18











          • @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

            – Tim
            Dec 30 '18 at 9:31

















          Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

          – crater2150
          Dec 29 '18 at 21:18





          Oh, I didn't even know the nut was usually a part that would need maintenance, as the one on my guitar is made of metal, so no cutting in. Interesting.

          – crater2150
          Dec 29 '18 at 21:18













          @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

          – Tim
          Dec 30 '18 at 9:31






          @crater2150 - should you consider fitting heavier gauge strings, it may be necessary to do a spot of nut cutting. Zero fretted guitars obviate that problem, if the slots are wide enough anyway.

          – Tim
          Dec 30 '18 at 9:31


















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