ryandias
Automotive
- Jul 28, 2006
- 197
So recently a plastic part we designed was measured and statistics etc about the manufactured parts were gathered.
They suggested we should change our drawings and in-turn models to reflect they're manufacturing capabilities. We have been discussing weather our models should be updated to reflect the manufacturers inability to generate "propper" parts, or if we should just alter the drawings with specific notes indicating why the demensions have been "forced" to reflect the manufacture capabilities (ie they're tooling was probably created impropperly).
Anyhow, a mistake has been made, thats not what my question relates to. What i am asking is do we reflect the mistake in the model? or just the drawing? If just the drawing, how would you indicate the dimension is "forced" and varies from the design intent?
I was thinking coloring the dimension Blue rather then black with a note. This way printed drawings won't "see" it but when looked at electronically (internally) we see what is ... different.
They suggested we should change our drawings and in-turn models to reflect they're manufacturing capabilities. We have been discussing weather our models should be updated to reflect the manufacturers inability to generate "propper" parts, or if we should just alter the drawings with specific notes indicating why the demensions have been "forced" to reflect the manufacture capabilities (ie they're tooling was probably created impropperly).
Anyhow, a mistake has been made, thats not what my question relates to. What i am asking is do we reflect the mistake in the model? or just the drawing? If just the drawing, how would you indicate the dimension is "forced" and varies from the design intent?
I was thinking coloring the dimension Blue rather then black with a note. This way printed drawings won't "see" it but when looked at electronically (internally) we see what is ... different.