The surface plate is oftentimes referred to as the foundation of measurement since it provides the reference for much of the layout work done in an inspection cell. When used in combination with various gages and accessories, such as height gages, gage blocks, angle plates, and squares, they can be used to check a wide range of parameters, including length, flatness, squareness, straightness, angle, feature location, and runout. Surface plates are simple, and extremely versatile.
Surface plates provide a stable reference surface on a large scale, making a great many gaging setups possible on a single, simple piece of equipment. When a gaging application does not warrant the purchase of a special-purpose fixture gage, surface plates often provide an economical all-purpose solution. Surface plates also come in so many sizes that they can be used for a wide range of part sizes.
However, not too many people realize that the surface plate can become a gage. A hole is bored in the plate, and a gage head installed to inspect flush surfaces for flatness without the use of a height stand. When small parts are involved, inspection is done by simply moving a part over the probe and reading the flatness variations directly on the amplifier readout. What is happening here is that the three highest points on the surface plate are creating a plane on which the part rides. The probe mounted in the plate then senses the change or variation in the surface of the part as it is moved over it. This is a dynamic check in that the part has to move in order to determine the out-of-flatness condition so rather than have an operator try to remember the highest and lowest value on the display and figure out the difference—which is the total out of flatness condition—the amplifier would be set to its dynamic TIR (Max-Min) mode, and the result would be the out of flatness condition.
Of course, an "assumption" has to be made with this form of flatness check. Note that in this example there is one electronic probe, and that the part is moved over it. Thus, there is no way that every square millimeter of the part could ever be explored. What generally happens is that the operator will follow a pattern on the part covering the outer and inner area. The user then "assumes" everything in between is within what was measured. That is usually the case, but some areas may be missed. Nevertheless, for a fast and high-performance check, this type of flatness gage can't be beat.
Speaking of high performance—and again this is a relative term—surface plates come in many grades, and therefore the grade will help determine the performance of the system. Three-point support provided on a surface plate may have an accuracy to 50μ" (inspection grade A). Other plate sizes and accuracies are available. This must be considered as part of the measurement's potential error.
To take the gage concept one step further, a second gage head mounted in an arm/stand configuration can be positioned directly above the one embedded in the surface plate, permitting independent measurements of flatness, thickness, and parallelism. For relatively small parts it’s fairly easy to move the part between the probes to get readings of flatness and parallelism. The thickness check might be made either at the beginning or end of the dynamics and used as the nominal thickness and the parallelism result applied to this. With so many things going on and the need to share probes, it becomes a little more complicated for the operator.
Sometimes the parts may be fairly large sheets of films, plastics or metal and large-scale precision thickness measurements may be needed. Or maybe there are circuit boards where certain lands need to be verified for thickness. This is when the surface plate can act as a base of a large thickness gage. The surface plate is economical even in large sizes and a robust arm or strong bridge can be used to support the upper probe over the probe in the base. Now the user can move the large sheets between the contacts to the specified location to get the thickness measurement.
With the simple, single probe flatness gage, watching one readout for flatness variation and remembering the min/max is not that challenging. However, even in this application a dynamic function on the amplifier could be employed to remember these points in the background and provide the difference, which would be the flatness deviation. Or to make it easier for the operator, especially with large parts requiring multiple measuring points, a computer-based system with a guided sequence would lead them through gathering the data, in a specified order and produce a data table for the sample.
Surface plates provide a stable reference surface on a large scale, making a great many gaging setups possible on a single, simple piece of equipment. When a gaging application does not warrant the purchase of a special-purpose fixture gage, a surface plate itself can also be a gage.