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Gauges

Gauges are devices or systems used to determine size, quantity, or other physical dimensions. The term covers a wide range of tools and standards across engineering, manufacturing, rail transport, and weaponry, and can denote both an instrument and the scale it reads.

Common categories include measurement gauges (instruments that read a dimension or value) and thickness or bore

Measurement gauges include pressure gauges, which indicate gas or liquid pressure; vacuum gauges, which measure low-pressure

Thickness and bore gauges include American Wire Gauge (AWG), a standard for electrical wire diameter; and sheet-metal

Track gauge refers to the distance between the inner faces of the rails of a railway track;

Gauge blocks are precision-length blocks used to calibrate measuring instruments and set standards in metrology. In

gauges
(used
to
measure
wires,
sheets,
or
bores).
conditions;
and
dial
gauges
or
dial
indicators,
which
quantify
small
linear
displacements
with
a
rotating
dial.
gauges,
such
as
Birmingham
or
similar
systems,
where
higher
gauge
numbers
denote
thinner
material
and
the
exact
thickness
varies
by
material.
standard
gauge
is
1,435
millimeters,
though
broad
and
narrow
gauges
exist
in
different
regions.
Gun
gauge
is
a
shotgun
bore
designation,
where
higher
numbers
indicate
a
smaller
bore
(for
example,
12
gauge).
manufacturing,
gauges
serve
for
inspection,
tolerancing,
and
quality
control,
and
gauge
systems
are
defined
by
regional
standards
and
industry
specifications.