drawoh,
I agree. Crap in gives crap out. However, that wasn't quite what I meant, but my post wasn't clear on that.
The measure that I have used to evaluate whether or not a drawing is well-drawn is to look at from a machinist's perspective. If the drawing gives me every dimension that I need to fabricate the part with the tolerances either indicated or defaulted without requiring additional calculations or translations, then it's probably usable. If it indicates design intent in the process, even better.
Basically, I should be able to take the print to any machinist in the shop, tell them how many parts that I need and when I need them by, and never hear from them until they drop that many parts on my desk. I should be able to determine, using calipers, micrometers, radius gauges, etc, whether or not each part is correct.
However, from the OP's original description, the senior designer's technique would force me to calculate various dimensions so that I could actually both fabricate and check the part. This would not be acceptable to me (YMMV). If the machinists have to "make it work", then the drawing is not right, because each machinist will "make it work" in a different way, thereby generating a different and possibly incompatible part.
As for the "banning" of GD&T, I cannot express the depth of my feelings on that. While I still to this day have to look up the GD&T information when I need it or come across it, it's too useful a tool to get rid of. The only thing that I can think of is that he so completely cannot understand GD&T that he doesn't want anyone to use it and show him up, so to speak. But I'm just guessing there.