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π Pinpoint Precision for Every Project!
The Mini-Ligno DX Pin Moisture Meter is a lightweight, portable device designed for professionals needing accurate moisture readings in wood, bamboo, sheetrock, and other building materials. With a measuring range of 5% to 65% and a digital read-out resolution of 0.1%, it offers 42 settings for versatile applications, ensuring you have the right tool for every job.
Manufacturer | Lignomat |
Part Number | D-0 |
Item Weight | 4.2 ounces |
Product Dimensions | 7 x 4 x 2.5 inches |
Item model number | DX |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Item Package Quantity | 1 |
Batteries Included? | No |
Batteries Required? | No |
C**R
Accurate wood moisture meter. Some Brazilian hardwoods are missing fro the correction table.
if you are doing a hardwood floor install, you need one of these. Not the $22 meters, but this, or a similar quality and accuracy alternatives. The LL warehouse people use this exact same meter to check the moisture content of their products.Difference between this ( DX mini) and the DX/C is thsat the dx/c has socket to plug in external probes, so it is more money. The mini-ligno DX/M is a less accurate versionSuper simple to use. (The pins are tempered steel and sharp. This is one differentiator between this, and the cheapo meters). The included correction settings table has 40+ different wood selections. The meter actually has 40+ settings, unlike the cheapo meters which usually only have a few actual settings on the meter, 4-8.I get a measurement each time, every time I use it, and the multiple measurements tend to agree.With a cheap meter, I do not always get a measurement, presumably because I am unble to press the pins deep enough into the wood. The measurements i do get vary quite a bit.The only frustration is that some brazilian wood flooring species are missing from the correction table ( E.g.: Tamboril : Enterolobium contortisiliquum)I called the Lignomat support line, and they told me to use the Teak settings. Not sure I believe them.,The rep I talked to offered to look it up on the internet, which did not give me a lot of confidence.Teak (Tektonia Grandis) has much less Janka hardness, is in a different botanical family, and half the specific gravity. The only commonality I see that Tamboril is sometimes called Golden Teak, which is coincidental IMO.It is impossible to find a "similar" wood species, where you do not know what exactly needs to be similar. Is it specific gravity? Is it chemical properties? Geography?
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