Quick answer

600 mesh ≈ 18 µm

According to common US sieve references, 600 mesh correlates with about 18 micrometers (0.018 mm / 0.000709 in). Validate critical specs independently.

Reference opening

Mesh
600
Millimeters (mm)
0.018
Microns (µm)
18
inch
0.000709

Ultra-fine nylon/stainless specialty cloth — VERY approximate opening; verify with microscopy & supplier docs

Approximate sieve opening — not a formula

Mesh counts describe weave density; micron columns summarize nominal aperture sizes taken from ASTM-like charts. Wire diameter tolerances, corrosion, ISO vs ASTM wording, and microscope calibration all influence measured openings.

Nearby mesh comparison

MeshµmmmLink
600180.018Mesh detail page
500250.025Mesh detail page
800130.013Mesh detail page

Try the live calculators

Jump into the interactive tools when you need arbitrary mesh counts, micron targets, or quick copy/paste summaries for RFQs.

How industrial teams interpret this row

Treat handbook micron openings as communication shorthand — procurement still requires supplier certs; QA needs retained-mass logs tied to calibrated stacks.

Typical applications

Teams deploy these meshes across powder coatings, pharmaceutical milling, hydraulic filtration, abrasive blasting, and precision polishing workflows.

People also ask

Is 600 mesh finer than 500 mesh?
Higher mesh counts mean smaller openings — compare micron columns when unsure.
Can I buy exact micron cloth?
Most vendors quote mesh counts — convert using standardized charts then confirm measurements.
Does humidity affect sieve tests?
Yes — hygroscopic powders cake and skew retained masses.
Which ASTM or ISO doc applies?
ASTM E11 governs many North American test sieves while ISO 3310-1 covers woven wire internationally — cite whichever your PO references.
Why trust MeshToMicron.org?
We expose transparent handbook rows plus disclaimers — always reconcile against your supplier calibration packet.

Values remain approximate — cite supplier certifications when auditing.