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Angle Less than One Degree. 4

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SDETERS

Agricultural
May 1, 2008
1,310
Looking at an Inch print using ASME Y14.5-1994 specifying an angle of .50 degrees.

Does one use a leading zero or not on this dimension? 0.5 degrees or .5 degrees

Thanks

 
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This may or may not help you, but the 2009 standard added wording to the end section 1.5.5 stating that "Where decimal degrees less than one are specified, a zero shall precede the decimal value."

This wording was not in the 1994 standard that I am aware of.

If you look at figure 2-2 in the 94 standard, it does show a tolerance of -0.2 degrees with a leading zero.
 
Leading zero should be omitted.

Number of trailing zeros depends on a tolerance for this angular dimension. Generally saying - both dimension and tolerance must have the same number of digits after decimal point.
 
Great that is what I was looking for.

Thanks
 
There should be "should not" in the first sentence of my post.
 
As far as I can tell Y14.5-1994 is silent on this question. I would be inclined to go without the leading zero, just for similar look to any linear dimensions less than one. I'd say either one would be 'legal'. If it's a common situation for your company I'd say it should go in a company standard.
 
I'd be inclined to use a leading 0 because the decimal point is easy to miss.



Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA
 
The Angle Dimension I have looks like .35`+/-.15`

This looks really close to .35+/-.15.

So we usually look to the next standard if the Current one does not answer our questions.

Thanks again for all the feedback
 
According to Y14.5-2009 (paras. 1.5.5 & 2.3.3) it should be:
0deg35' +/- 0deg15'
 
pmarc,

Does Y14.5-2009 (paras. 1.5.5 & 2.3.3) really show the angle using mixed unit symbols? (deg and '), as opposed to 0°35' ±0°15' ?
 
By typing "deg" I meant degree symbol - I just did not realize that there is a possibility of putting 0 superscripted in the post. Sorry if this made any confusion.
 
The title of this thread seems to allow the question that I'm about to ask, but with the discussion being about leading zeros, just tell me to go away and stop hijacking the thread if I'm off base...

What about the fact that a directly toleranced angle is very likely ambiguous and/or not providing the control that the part's function requires? If the considered feature is a planar surface then there is no tolerance zone for such a spec other than 4 lines drawn on a 2D cross-section of the feature that define min & max angles. If the considered feature is cylindrical then what is the controlled feature component and what is it controlled relative to?

For drafted features all the same issues apply. We've all seen direct tolerances applied to draft angles, but "relative to what measurable element/reference frame?" is the unanswered part of those specs.

Since this is a GD&T forum it seems appropriate to bring up the fact that the directly toleranced angle being discussed should be replaced with a basic angle from a plane or axis of a datum reference frame that is included as part of a position or profile call-out... Yes? No? :)

Should I have started a new thread?
 
GD&T is not _all_ this forum is about.
Whether to use GD&T is a separate discussion.

One other extraneous point that's a little closer to the core of the discussion is that it will almost certainly be necessary to include a synthesized view with the angle exaggerated, in order to make any sense of the direction of a small angle.



Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA
 
Hi Dean -- I'm not sure what you mean by the 4 lines, but there is indeed some baggage that comes with a directly toleranced angle. One issue is that a ± angle tolerance will yield a widening zone as you go further out from the vertex. This is not illegal, but something to be aware of (and thus, form of the surface is not controlled). Also, how do we know which "leg" of the angle gets the tolerance? If I see a drawing with 45º ± 1º I might measure that ±1º as being on the base leg, where another person might think of the tolerance as being on the other part of the 45º -- and there are times when it could make a difference.

I think that's along the same lines as your comment, so yes I agree!

John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
 
Please see example for what is getting dimensioned.

I made the drawing more simple just to show the feature in question. I see how a profile of surface could be used instead of of a directly dimensioned angle with a +/- dimenion. The r2.0 is there to show the cross section go through a circular area of the part

Thanks



 
 http://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=c5f1b0e4-0f0e-4b8b-972b-01565bd96175&file=example.pdf
SDETERS,

Since you are using The Y14.5 standard, may I suggest you relocate your datum feature symbol B. The standard states that datum feature symbols identify physical features and should not be applied to center lines, planes, or axes.

The problem for manufacturing/inspection is how do they know which feature the center line/plane is referring to.

I would also consider Mike Halloran's point - how do they know which way the angle goes? Is it tapered up, or down? You may have to exaggerate the angle or clarify with a note.
 
The B datum is specified somewhere else on the print. B datum is a feature on the print. I did not show the entire print. I want to make sure the angle is dimensioned from the datum B plane.

The angle direction should be implied. This part comes off a mold and for this to happen the draft can only be in one direction because the if it was the other way the tool we would crash.

Good points and also thanks for the feedback.
 
SDETERS,

If you have access to ASME Y14.8-2009: "Castings, Forgings, and Molded Parts", section 3.6 specifies different methods of assigning draft angles. Maybe you can find something interesting for you.

'Directly toleranced angle' method is not among them mainly because of all the reasons that Dean and J-P highlighted.
 
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