chez311,
Regarding the effect of datum feature simulators or lack of them on the interaction between features and UAME envelopes, I agree with the points you brought up. The most important thing is that it remains clear that relative movement problems can be dealt with by technical means and one shouldn't sort features to types according to the probability to experience relative movement problems; for a primary datum feature simulation, the simulator can be fixed, as you said. For position inspection, the part will be fixed during UAME simulation, as you acknowledged. If both the simulator and the part are held manually as in the additional scenario you mentioned, the hands act as the constraining device when needed. Relative movement can and will occur, but it also can and will be controlled.
chez311 said:
I am of the opposing opinion - I would say it is the only definition directly supported by the standard. It is an unambiguous interpretation of the statement found in 1.3.25 stating an actual mating envelope is "A similar perfect feature(s) counterpart of smallest size that can be contracted about an external feature(s) or largest size that can be expanded within an internal feature(s)".
You ended the quote in the middle of a sentence. The definition is not complete without the missing part: "
... so that it coincides with the highest points". This is not just a clarification about the envelope being outside of the material, but part of the requirement: the simulator must surround the feature in a close contact relationship.
This essentially means that if an envelope that conforms to this condition can be found for a given as produced feature, this envelope is the UAME. If the envelope can contract further, but the further contraction is accompanied by loosening the contact with the feature, the envelope that was already established when there was a sufficient contact is still valid, as it remains the smallest envelope that conforms to the definition. There is nothing in the definition that says that it is mandatory that the physical contact between the feature and a simulator constrains the simulator as in a simple case of a vise that is stopped by the object it closes on.
This brings me to pylfrm's plots. It is not always the minimum value that should be looked for. Even where a local minima can't be detected, one of the values can represent the actual UAME size. The plot doesn't provide the information about the amount of contact along the process.
Inspection-wise, it is all a question of the available technology. If detection of the UAME which "coincides with the highest points" (according to pmarc, there should be 3 of them) is possible for a pair of "offset-opposed" surfaces, and nothing in the process contradicts the standard, why forbid it?