vonsteimel
Mechanical
- Oct 19, 2010
- 132
I've got a small question concerning the fabrication of Jig/Fixtures. When I was in school our teacher taught us that the machinist would use transfer punches a lot to transfer holes from one part to the next. For instance, a Drill Jig which requires several steel base/plates to assembled together, located by dowels & secured with SHCS's -- They would make the base-plate and then use transfer punches to locate the holes on the mating plate. Then go back & drill & ream the holes, and this is how the build them; that not every single hole was laid out and drilled.... Recently I got in a debate about the accuracy of this method due to the concentricity issues of standard drill-bits. That the drill-bit would not create a concentric hole with the transfer-punch mark (which is true to an extent) that would have a big effect on accuracy, and that the corret way to do it was to "clamp" the parts together and use a longer drill-bit to drill through them simotaneuously. Now this would probably work given that the parts were "clamped" together in the correct locations but it seems a little unconventional. So what do you all think?