TrailMaker004
Mechanical
- Apr 5, 2010
- 20
I have an application of profile tolerancing on a gage. There is a cavity in the gage where portions of the inside profile are very critical, and the remainder much less so. In the attached dwg, the portions designated y-z and w-x are the critical areas held to .0004 profile. The remainder is essentially clearance (held to .005 profile). The cavity features are constrained only to datum surface A, which is the plane perpendicular to this cavity. Rotation and location of the cavity are unimportant to the application.
My concern, and what is important to us is this: the (3) profile segments indicated by the w-x and y-z extents must be correctly related to each other (within the .0004 profile requirement) That is to say, they cannot just be correctly machined within their individual extents. I do not want to hold the remainder of the features to the .0004 requirement just to ensure that. Nor do I want to impose additional datums that would be unnecessary to the application because either of these would make this more difficult and expensive to mfgr.
The way I see this callout presently however, it would allow the (3) segements to "float" independently of each other in the X-Y plane both in location and rotation (at least from an inspection point of view). Am I incorrect in that?
My concern, and what is important to us is this: the (3) profile segments indicated by the w-x and y-z extents must be correctly related to each other (within the .0004 profile requirement) That is to say, they cannot just be correctly machined within their individual extents. I do not want to hold the remainder of the features to the .0004 requirement just to ensure that. Nor do I want to impose additional datums that would be unnecessary to the application because either of these would make this more difficult and expensive to mfgr.
The way I see this callout presently however, it would allow the (3) segements to "float" independently of each other in the X-Y plane both in location and rotation (at least from an inspection point of view). Am I incorrect in that?