ModulusCT
Mechanical
- Nov 13, 2006
- 212
Hi everyone... Have a look at the attached .jpg please.
Where I work, this is a standard view of a metal housing used to hold a small electrical component that we design and manufacture here.
My question is... Why on Earth would you want to use the profile tolerance on the bottom surface instead of another flatness tolerance? This housing simply sits in a larger housing where it is connected to the outside world. The inner housing is necessary because the electrical component I mentioned need to be hermetically sealed and thermally controlled.
I could even understand using profile of a surface over profile of a line... Am I missing something? Or is 'the way we've always done it' now 'the way we shouldn't do it anymore'?
Thanks,
Mod
Where I work, this is a standard view of a metal housing used to hold a small electrical component that we design and manufacture here.
My question is... Why on Earth would you want to use the profile tolerance on the bottom surface instead of another flatness tolerance? This housing simply sits in a larger housing where it is connected to the outside world. The inner housing is necessary because the electrical component I mentioned need to be hermetically sealed and thermally controlled.
I could even understand using profile of a surface over profile of a line... Am I missing something? Or is 'the way we've always done it' now 'the way we shouldn't do it anymore'?
Thanks,
Mod