Rubicon Prec.
New member
The longer lever has to move farther to move the dial the same amount, hence greater resolution. However the marking on the dial have a lesser value. Example: if I have a stylus 1" long from the pivot to the center of the ball and I move the workpiece .005, the dial will register .005. If I change to a 2" stylus and move the workpiece .005 the dial will register .0025. It has greater resolution but the dial is not correct. To correct for the dial markings we must multiply the numeric values by the ratio of the stylus length increase, in the example above, you would double the values.
Gort
I'd call that lower resolution with the longer stylus.
We could also look at it another way, say we left the stylus alone and went from a 1" diameter dial with a hash mark every degree around the circumference of the dial. Now we increase the dial to 10", still with hash marks every degree around the circumference. It will be far easier to read between the hash marks on the 10" dial than it will on the 1" with the same amount of stylus movement, or a higher resolution.