bpcash
Mechanical
- Apr 15, 2009
- 6
At our company, whenever a we have a problem with a supplier meeting our tolerance, there is grumbling from management, purchasing, etc., the gist of which is "@%$# engineers can't design something that anyone can actually build". While I'm sure there are cases where this is true, there are times when tight tolerances are justified. I think our problem is that we do a poor job of communicating *why* we need such tight tolerances. Our design process seems to just output the specs and drawings, but the reasoning exists only in the mind of the engineer who did the work.
Anyone else have this same problem? How do you document the decision to go with +/-.0002, or to use some exotic material?
Anyone else have this same problem? How do you document the decision to go with +/-.0002, or to use some exotic material?