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Canonical method for installation of hydraulic connectors at a given angle with specific tolerance

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F. S. Farimani

Mechanical
Joined
Jul 17, 2020
Messages
9
Location
NL
We have a hydraulic system with multiple elbow connectors, for example:

F7972003-01_cfggfq.jpg


That connect hoses to some manifolds and other stuff. The connectors need to be installed at specific angles with certain tolerance (i.e., ±5⁰), for example:

Picture1_vspnyv.png


Though, the system is not mass produced per se (let's say once a week), it needs to be rather precise. So one of our genius technicians at manufacturing department has built some molds so they can test the angles and make sure they are within the given tolerance. And by mold I mean a piece of cute sheet metal with an inclined edge, which they place under the connector. Just like that!

Now I was wondering if there is a more canonical way to handle this. These are the ideas coming to my mind:

[ul]
[li]Some form of gauged torque wrench which the user can read the angle from manually[/li]
[li]laser cutting, carving, or printing the angles onto the parts and manifolds so the user can confirm the angles visually[/li]
[/ul]

I'm interested to know your opinion. Should we just streamline the technician's idea? should we use any of the ideas above? Do you have any other ideas or maybe there are already best practices for this in industry? Thanks for your support in advance and looking forward to hearing back.
 
I'd be more specific about which feature the angle applied to, such as the face of the fitting or the width of the flats.

("per se" is latin for "of itself." Weird to see used that way.)
 
Plasma cutters can do a surface marking called an 'arc line' while they cut your blank.
 
Consider cheap 3D printed snapped-on covers that key to the manifold and if the manifolds are being custom machined include an index hole.

Keith Cress
kcress -
 
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