Coplanarity application
Coplanarity application
(OP)
Few questions arose when I saw an IC package outline drawing last week, pls ref to the attached for details, my questions:
Question 1: Can we delete the datum reference C from profile FCF?
Question 2: Profile tolerance value will be less than the size tolerance, am I right?
Thanks for your valuable comments.
Season
Question 1: Can we delete the datum reference C from profile FCF?
Question 2: Profile tolerance value will be less than the size tolerance, am I right?
Thanks for your valuable comments.
Season





RE: Coplanarity application
Datum feature C isn't labeled; that's the first problem. But assuming it's the main flat face, then it's OK to leave datum C reference in the profile callout.
Since that profile is 2X, the profile itself controls the size (height and width), so there is no reason to have the profile be less than the size tolerance (the size is basic).
Several other things (such as the composite position being changed to 2 single segments with 2 position symbols), but I hope that helps for your original questions.
ADDED TEXT: see next post
John-Paul Belanger
RE: Coplanarity application
John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
RE: Coplanarity application
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
RE: Coplanarity application
There are 3 pages on my attachment, page 3 mentioned the coplanar surface is composed of 64 lead surfaces and the exposed die pad, a profile control will be used to treat them as a single surface, in this type of application, the profile control is a form control and does not use datum references, example is shown below. I still can’t understand “datum C is fine” here, would you please have more detailed interpretation on it.
Season
RE: Coplanarity application
RE: Coplanarity application
Your second question seems to bring up a good point too. If the profile tolerance is really utilized to that full 0.08, it will make some of the surfaces sit below the other surfaces, which is exactly what you don't want. Sure, you can make the profile tolerance less than 0.05, but make sure that they can still hold that.
Greenimi -- What you suggest wouldn't be the same thing. The current use of profile on those 4 edges (2X for each profile) controls the form, orientation, location, and size of the full perimeter. It's essentially an "all around" profile (which would have been an easier way to show it).
Perpendicularity would only control form and orientation, and require the basic dims to be changed to toleranced dims.
John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
RE: Coplanarity application
I would say if you cannot say for sure/ you cannot tell how far apart is C from A and/or from B respectively, then the correct callout is orientation and not location. Same design intent, but bad “grammar” in GDT language.
RE: Coplanarity application
May I ask why will you make the change from composite position to two single-segment position callout? I don't want anything missed on this thread.
Season
RE: Coplanarity application
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
RE: Coplanarity application
So the four sides are not just oriented, but also distanced apart. IOW, the max width of the square is 7.1 mm, and the min could be 6.9 mm.
John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
RE: Coplanarity application
Regarding your statement "The current use of profile on those 4 edges (2X for each profile) controls the form, orientation, location, and size of the full perimeter. It's essentially an "all around" profile (which would have been an easier way to show it)." I think using 2X to cause the profile to apply to the opposite surface is a push. I cannot understand how you get to the "all around" interpretation. Can you expand on this?
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
RE: Coplanarity application
RE: Coplanarity application
Season
RE: Coplanarity application
I can only turn the question around to you, and ask what the 2X could possibly mean to you if it's not referring to the opposing side?
(The all-around idea comes from the additional fact that these are simultaneous requirements.)
John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
RE: Coplanarity application
2X on two sides means all around, I believe it's a bad “grammar” in GDT language(quoted from greenimi), pls see the figure below, you may find it out at page 25 on this document, “IC Packages / PCB Footprint Guidelines”, just google it.
Season
RE: Coplanarity application
Thanks for responding. I am not familiar with PCB industry product definition drawings so your all around interpretation is not on my "list". Additionally, Y14.5 is for "engineering drawings" and I work with large machinery, so I use "mechanical" eyes when review drawings. If you look a the list of companies that Y14.5 Committee members work for, most make "mechanical" products, so the examples in the Y14.5 are predominately mechanical parts. So, is a PC board an engineered part - I think it is. Maybe PC companies should lobby for examples of PC boards in the Y14.5 standard.
You can be "creative" and use "bad grammar" but you run the risk of miscommunication. I also recognize Y14.5 does not show every possible application (considering what I said earlier). Consequently, many industries use GDT in "special ways" and this gets propagated by documents like you referenced. In my mind, this doesn't justify "bad grammar" but should encourage readers/users to present challenges to the governing body of the document - the Y14.5 Committee is sanctioned by ASME - to make changes at the next issue of the document or release errata revisions every so often. Is the document you referenced sanctioned our just something that has evolved and that everyone "trusts" for guidance? I do not have time right now to find and reviews the "IC Packages / PCB Footprint Guidelines” you mentioned. Food for thought.
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
RE: Coplanarity application
I had a chance to google the phrase and found the underlying document is not an PCB industry standard that is sanctioned by a governing body, but is an internal "standards" document for TRINAMIC Motion Control GmbH & Co. So I ask: unless you work for them, why do you use this as an trusted "dictionary"? I also note that the 2X for profile was not shown anywhere and that the "as per Y14.5" all-around "circle" was used in many examples to define part exterior geometry (as you posted earlier).
I may be beating a dead horse, but I still cannot get to "all around" interpretation per 4.19 SIMULTANEOUS REQUIREMENTS using the 2X notation in your OP. I cannot connect the 2 pairs of sides using the understood BASIC 90-deg (at the corners) to control the orientation (perpendicularity) relationship between the 2 pairs to create a BASIC square "pattern". If you had one profile-of-a-surface FCF with 4X I could see the four sides being connected as one square festure, but the 2X doesn't' get me there.
I really appreciate your post for exposing me to the use of GDT for the PCB's.
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
RE: Coplanarity application
Look what happens when the first part of the 'or' clause is removed:
4.19 A simultaneous requirement is where two or more geometric tolerances apply as a single ... part requirement.
RE: Coplanarity application
After following this thread, I better understand that 2X with identical datum sequences means "all around". I guess my "limited" exposure to the application and interpretation of profile as related to 4.19 Simultaneous Requirement prevents me from an "instantaneous" understanding. Being confused, I have go to square-one: review the basic GDT conventions and apply them to one-by-one to the dimension schema to say "ah, that means all around". Thanks for showing me the way.
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional