SpaciouS
Mechanical
- Jun 3, 2011
- 69
Hi,
I’m having a discussion about using the ‘BOUNDARY’ condition on a slot, and I am having trouble figuring out its benefit. I’ve read this section ('94), SEVERAL times and still don’t fully understand if one theoretical boundary is better than the other, particularly between;
(a) In Terms of Surface of a Feature
(c) In Terms of Boundary for an Elongated Feature
I understand the theoretical boundaries have different shapes, such as a rectangle vs. identical shape, but is there a benefit to using BOUNDARY? The only thing I could come up with is when BOUNDARY is invoked; the ‘clocking’ of the slot about true position is essentially tighter, since the bundary is longer (not sure if that’s right).
Thanks,
Sean
I’m having a discussion about using the ‘BOUNDARY’ condition on a slot, and I am having trouble figuring out its benefit. I’ve read this section ('94), SEVERAL times and still don’t fully understand if one theoretical boundary is better than the other, particularly between;
(a) In Terms of Surface of a Feature
(c) In Terms of Boundary for an Elongated Feature
I understand the theoretical boundaries have different shapes, such as a rectangle vs. identical shape, but is there a benefit to using BOUNDARY? The only thing I could come up with is when BOUNDARY is invoked; the ‘clocking’ of the slot about true position is essentially tighter, since the bundary is longer (not sure if that’s right).
Thanks,
Sean