JP,
I'm not sure what they would say about the radius suggestion. Probably something like "well, a radius is not a feature of size, so profiling it would be ridiculous" ;^)
It looks like my bitter rant about "un-refining" didn't get the point across. If a smaller tolerance A refines a larger tolerance B, the larger tolerance B does not un-refine the smaller tolerance A. I'll try the explanation again before I've had too much coffee.
Back to Figure 8-27. If the 80 was a basic dimension, the profile tolerance would control the location of the surface within a zone 0.07 wide. In other words, the height relative to datum A would be controlled within 0.035. Because profile controls location.
But if we change the 80 to a directly toleranced dimension, the height is controlled within +/- 0.2. Suddenly profile doesn't control location anymore. The addition of the size tolerance has "un-refined" the control that would have been provided by the profile tolerance.
This is not how combinations of geometric tolerances and size normally work. If I have a cylindricity tolerance of .005 and a size tolerance of +/- .010, the form of the cylinder is controlled within .005. We don't "un-refine" the cylindricity to .020.
Is that a better explanation? I suppose that the opposing argument is that profile only controls location (or relative location) if the true location is defined by basic dimensions. By the same token, profile only controls size if the true size is defined by a basic dimension. Does this mean that profile only controls orientation if the true orientation is defined by a basic angle?
Evan Janeshewski
Axymetrix Quality Engineering Inc.