Wow, talk about a brain fart! Tks Paul. I read and saw SR, but in my mind I jumped to a taper ... why, dunno. So, let's try again.
For the casting drawing:
First, usually cast datums will have a different letter callout vs the machined drawing. By industry convention, Z/Y/X are the primary/secondary/tertiary datums for castings, forgings and molded articles. This helps to distinguish the datums from machined datums.
Next, There is no control on datum feature-A; because it's not a FOS, you'll need a surface profile, and make SR.633 a basic dimension. Datum feature-B is not adequate in size to effectively constrain rotations as a secondary datum; datum feature-C would be more appropriate (and successful) as a secondary datum. Datum Feature-C needs to be identified; putting a datum callout on the centerline is illegal (ISO and ASME), so you need to establish the datum FEATURE used to establish the datum axis. Secondary datum feature (B as it is now, C as proposed) needs to be controlled back to primary datum-A). The tertiary datum feature (C as it is now, B as proposed) needs to be controlled back to the primary and secondary datums.
What feature is the .629 diameter? The "bottom" ring of the conical taper boundary of the SR? Why is the relationship so important on the casting?
For the machined drawing:
You need to properly call out datums features-A, -B, -C, control the datum features and relate them back to higher precedent datums.
Profile of a surface callout cannot be attached to the basic R.433 (which needs to be SR).
Datum feature-B is redundant because datum-A eliminates the 3 translational dof's (per PJ). The machined diameter of the pin may make a useful secondary datum feature. The feature labeled datum feature-C is a good choice for tertiary datum; consider it for use on the cast drawing as well.
That should be a good start.
Jim Sykes, P.Eng, GDTP-S
Profile Services
TecEase, Inc.