casting drawing tolerance question
casting drawing tolerance question
(OP)
hello - our vice president has been checking our recent job (we are slow & he has nothing better to do) & he came down kinda hard on me the designer on friday after i had made a casting drawing of a part - i allowed anywhere from 3-6mm of stock to the casting before machining - i then showed my 1st datum & referenced the casting dim along w/ the amount to remove - also i referenced a 25mm dim. - he told me that i should never show what i want to remove nor should i give a ref. to the casting dims - let the foundry figure it out - also he said the 25 dim could turn out to be 22 after the casting was made - i countered that the dim could not be out that much due to the tolerance in the title block (+/-.4mm) - he told me the title block tolerance does not apply to a casting drawing - any input would be apprecaited - thank you





RE: casting drawing tolerance question
Tolerances don't apply for the foundry? Unfortunately a lot of people seem to believe this - I've seen lot's of scrapped machined parts because the castings weren't thick enough. This not only wastes material (the foundry can melt it back down to try again with), it wastes transportation costs (your casting and your machining don't happen at the same place do they?) and machining time. Of course tolerances apply for the foundry. On the other hand, you've got to give the foundry tolerances that are realistic for the process. Assuming that you are dealing with a simple sand casting a tolerance of +/- 0.4mm just isn't a reasonable expectation.
I think that a ref to the casting dimensions on a machining drawing is ok - it lets the machine shop know where the part is supposed to be inside the raw casting.
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
If you referenced the 25mm dimension by putting parenthesis around it, and it's not shown anywhere else on the print as a hard dimension, then your VP is correct they can pretty much make it whatever. Reference dimensions have no tolerance and they are also comprised of other dimensions stacked up and added (or subtracted...depending) together. This means their tolerances also stack up. If the 25mm dimension is the total of 7 or 8 dimensions added together then VP is also correct.
Hopefully I've understood the situation correctly.
Powerhound, GDTP T-0419
Production Manager
Inventor 2009
Mastercam X3
Smartcam 11.1
SSG, U.S. Army
Taji, Iraq OIF II
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
If pleasing the vice-president is critical to your continued employment then it is certainly risky to argue him/her based on advice offered here. I would do it his way unless I had plenty of practical experience and either thought there was low risk of reprisal from my objections or I was prepared to accept the risk from those objections.
There are many ways to approach casting specifications depending upon the ultimate function of the product in terms of its structural integrity, metallurgical properties, "as cast" dimensional integrity, subsequent process registry requirements and/or appearance.
Small tolerances for profile are not uncommon for the industry that I used to work in... but in order to achieve them all of the sources for casting variation need to be addressed in terms of shrink, distortion, blow, shift, registry, balance... etc.
Before I retired recently I helped define precision hydraulic die-cast control bodies for transmissions where we specified datum features solely in the ejector side "the critical business side" of the body such that the intersection of the secondary and tertiary datum feature registries occurred in the center of the structure to minimize the effects of shrink variation across the structure. Since our objective was to achieve "the best possible" location and orientation of the valve port annulus' and the minimum required post-cast machining... we cored fastener thru holes in both the cover (~+) and ejector sides that didn't require machining (to maintain minimum wall thickness and minimize the risk of exposing porosity).
It all comes down to function... design integrity and economy. Like I said "there are many ways to approach casting specifications..." Your vice president's method may not be the best of all but it may be less risky for you to heed his advice.
Paul
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
frustrating to work under these conditions sometime when you have to consatntly get out your 8-ball & shake it for an answer - once again i thank you all for your help
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
Based on ASME Y14.8M-1996 Castings and Forgings, 2 Drawing Presentation
2.1 General
This Section establishes methods of preparing casting/forging drawing.
2.2 Drawings Containing Separate Views
The casting/forging requirements and the machining requirements are shown in separate views or on separate drawings. Phantom lines may be used on the casting/forging views to show the outline of the part configuration after machining (see Fig. 2-1)
2.3 Drawings Containing Combined Views
Both the casting/forging requirements and the machining requirements are shown in superimposed views. Phantom lines may be used to show the casting/forging outline (see Fig. 2-2). Notes and tolerances relative to casting/forging shall be distinguished from those relative to machining. Due to the possibility of conflicting casting/forging and machining requirements, combined view drawings should be used with caution.
2.4 End Item Drawing
An end item drawing defines either an individual part or assembly in its final or completed state. Surfaces may be cast/forged or machined to meet drawing requirements. Notes relative to machining shall be listed separately (see Fig. 2-3).
All above are quoted from the standard, sorry for I can't post the figures publicly, I will forward the figures individually if anyone who are interested to get the figures. We are a casting/forging OEM parts supplier, a lot of parts need secondary machining by our customer, as what I know "anywhere from 3~6 mm of stock to the casting before machining" is really too much for a secondary machining.
Here is the general tolerance used on casting/forging:
X.XXX = ± .010 (or ±.015), X.XX = ±.02 up to one inch, ±.003 (or ±.005) for each additional inch.
SeasonLee
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
One thing I'm not quite clear on, are you doing separate casting & machining drawings?
Is this where the idea of the 'tol block not applying to castings' comes in? If using separate drawings then the tolerances on the machined drawings do not apply to cast features (ASME Y14.5M1.4(n)).
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies recently, or taken a look at posting policies: http://eng-tips.com/market.cfm?
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
it is of my opinion that any nominal dim. for the casting should have no larger tolerance then +/-.4mm (.015") - any machined dims. that are not specific tolerance will follow the title block tolerance of +/-.005" - maybe i am wrong in my thinking - thank you
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies recently, or taken a look at posting policies: http://eng-tips.com/market.cfm?
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
Most foundries I have investigated quote a tolerance capability of ±.005"/inch. This includes investment castings.
Any time I have done castings, I have prepared a separate drawing of the casting, and of the final machined part. I would not do otherwise unless I was confident that the casting and the machining would be done at the same site. I need to tell the foundry what I am doing to accept. I need to tell the machine shop what the raw material looks like. Casting tooling is expensive in my world, and I need to consider the possibility of an alternate machined part based on the existing casting.
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
It's easy to quote a nice tight process capability.
Most foundries that my vendors who use castings use seem to have a process capability of about +/- and inch or so.
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
However, I've seen very tight tolerances quoted on some small parts.
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies recently, or taken a look at posting policies: http://eng-tips.com/market.cfm?
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
Jim Sykes, P.Eng, GDTP-S
Profile Services www.profileservices.ca
TecEase, Inc. www.tec-ease.com
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
I'd instead suggest putting the tolerance on the individual dimensions (or obviously if applicable use GD&T FCF's).
You might get away with adding a note giving the different tolerances for 'cast features' but believe this may be confusing.
The problem with block tolerances isn't so much that people don't change them as that people invoke them without assessing the impact/meaning.
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies recently, or taken a look at posting policies: http://eng-tips.com/market.cfm?
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
This is my favorite drafting rant.
Casting, welding, sheet metal, carpentry and such are not accurate processes. To prepare drawings, you need to understand what your fabricator can do, and specify tolerances accordingly. If the feasible tolerances are too loose for your design to work, your design does not work.
I agree strongly with not using the title block defaults.
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
Definitely prefer a general surface profile with a tolerance value established for each individual drawing based on the most common tolerance on the drawing. Minimizes the detailing time.
Overall, I find that expectations for drawing-users' abilities have dwindled to the point where we are uncomfortable expecting people to be able to read drawings. Sometimes I feel like we've dumbed down our processes (design, manufacturing, inspection) too much, and that is one of the causal factors in our current economic situation.
Jim Sykes, P.Eng, GDTP-S
Profile Services www.profileservices.ca
TecEase, Inc. www.tec-ease.com
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
KENAT,
Have you reminded yourself of FAQ731-376: Eng-Tips.com Forum Policies recently, or taken a look at posting policies: http://eng-tips.com/market.cfm?
RE: casting drawing tolerance question
Jim Sykes, P.Eng, GDTP-S
Profile Services www.profileservices.ca
TecEase, Inc. www.tec-ease.com