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- toolcycle (3681)- Feedback left by buyer.Past monthVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
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- myequipmentwholesaler (71899)- Feedback left by buyer.Past monthVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- gosouthyoungman (2531)- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseThank you for an easy, pleasant transaction. Excellent buyer. A++++++.
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.Past 6 monthsVerified purchaseJust as described, works well. Thank you.
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Reviews (5)

Sep 29, 2020
Student version?
I'm convinced this is a genuine Mito, but their lowest quality/price of this type of caliper. The finish quality seems a little lower than my other Mito tools, but the accuracy is right on, and it looks durable.
It's a full 8" with both Metric and inch scales, and has the finer resolution of two types of Mito verniers. Although you will probably need magnification to read them if your eyes are 70+ years old like mine.
To the good it has both Mertric and inch scales,

Feb 11, 2019
Reviews are for a different item
1 of 1 found this helpful None of these reviews are for this item.

Jun 14, 2025
Excellent for the price
I'm a hobby machinist, and I needed a new chuck for my Jet 16" lathe.
Delivery was a problem, OnTrac sent the package to the wrong delivery center, it took a week longer to get here. I'm assuming that was not caused by Vevor, so no foul.
This is not a great chuck, but the price sure is -- ~$200. I priced similar chucks: Precision Mathews - $1200, Stefan Gotteswinter (YouTube) just reviewed an inexpensive Chinese chuck - $600+. I wanted to try a six jaw, but couldn't justify much over $200.
The camloc studs locking screws were counterbored too deep, I made spacers.
There was grit throughout the chuck, I took it apart (easy to do, marking the slot where I found the #1 jaw), degreased and cleaned it. Something you should do with every machine tool from China, Stefan Gotteswinter did it with his example.
I mounted the backing plate and trued it up, oiled everything, and reassembled it. The mechanism was tight, but that's better than loose, I expect it to loosen with use.
I measured the runout with a dowel pin, it was ~ .0003" -- more than acceptable for a scroll chuck.
I gave it a "four" because there was a lot of work to set it up, and I don't expect it to last forever. I almost gave it a "five" because it seems quite accurate at the moment.