16 gauge
A 100 gauge piece of aluminum has a thickness of 0.0010 inches. Gauge is a universal system used to measure the thickness of metal and wire.
14G
In Imperial standard (swg), 16 g is 0.064" (1.63mm) thick.
Depends on what kind of steel: 18 Gauge Standard Steel is .0478 Inches. 18 Gauge Galvanized Steel is: 0.0516 inches thick. FYI 18 Gauge Aluminum is 0.0403 18 gage steel is 0.0478 inches thick 18 gage steel is 0.0478 inches thick
18 gauge stainless steel is 0.0500 inches thick.
Sheet metal @ 8 gauge is 0.1644 inches for standard steel and 0.1285 for aluminum.
26 guage = 0.0165", which is a bit more than 1/64" in fractions. Four sheets of 26 guage aluminum laid on top of each other would measure about 1/16" thick.
The difference between 18 gauge and 22 gauge stainless steel is the thickness. The 18 gauge is 0.050" thick, and the 22 gauge is 0.031" thick. A link is provided below to an article with a list of the conversions. You'll note that the cited thickness for the gauges of stainless do not apply to galvanized steel, aluminum, zinc, brass or other metals.
19 gauge steel is 1.11 mm thick and 20 gauge is .953 mm thick.
thick
3/16" or 0.1875" *** 7 gauge steel sheet is .1793", not .1875" *** Different metals have different thickness for their gauge...mild steel is .1793, aluminum is .1443, stainless steel is .1875