With calipers, I close the jaws on the cloth and squeeze the jaws between forefinger and thumb as hard as I can and read off the measurement.
With this method, the 4 meters of 10 ounce denim I purchases last spring, measures .021" thick. I think Taylor gets the same measurement.
With the mic, I use the ratchet brrrrt and take the reading. This measurement will usually be .003 to .005" smaller than with the calipers, depending
on the cloth being measured. The 12 ounce denim I measured with calipers at .030" and mic at .025". The 14 ounce, I measured at .034" with calipers and .030" with the mic.
I wash the cloth twice, one cycle with soap to remove the sizing in new material and one cycle without soap to make sure I get ALL the soap out of the material.
I have 3 sets of calipers and they all give different readings,, .001" apart. Thus what someone measures as .022" for example, I might measure as .019, through
up to .023" or so, but that doesn't happen often.
Measuring cloth non-compressed is a waste of time, as it will be compressed between the ball, the lands and the grooves. In calibres up to & including .50, if there is no
compression in the bottom of the grooves, the patch will get burn marks by gas flow past it in the grooves.
I'm pressure sure that at .58 and larger, not sure about .54, there is enough obturation (expansion) of the ball upon ignition, to seal the bore with what I would call a weak
combination.
All of my guns shoot well with the current 10 ounce denim & did with the older 10 ounce denim I measured at .0225" with the calipers.
The red, while, drk blue, lgt blue mattress ticking that was even more accurate, we cannot find any more. It measured .0235", was exceptionally soft and loaded & shot beautifully.
This is it.