KENAT
Mechanical
- Jun 12, 2006
- 18,387
I can’t show an image for IP reasons but I have what is effectively an aluminum ‘vacuum plate’. It’s circular with a flat on one edge. It has a series of vacuum grooves, radial ones and ones going out like spokes, looks like a spiders web! The surfaces this creates are what the item being ‘vacuumed’ sits on, held in place by vacuum in the groove.
I’ve called out the outer ‘ring’ surface as datum A and made all 339 (yes I checked and that’s how many surfaces are created by the grooves) profile of a surface .0002 to A (we’ve apparently had samples made so I assume the tolerance is held) based on what ASME Y14.5M-1994 says in 6.5.6.1. The prototype print had flatness which isn’t correct for multiple surfaces.
Question 1 does this make sense, have I applied the standard correctly?
At the moment the proto print has the grooves dimensioned with +- dims. The cross sections of all 39 grooves are R.03 +- .01. The ‘spokes’ are 15° spacing +-.5° running from the inner radial groove to the outer one (which at their outermost point is +-.047 based on outermost ring having diameter of 10.75 if my math’s right, taking into account the stack of the 23 x 15° dimensions then the last groove could be off 11.5° or 23*.047, more than one inch!). The radial grooves had diameters +-.005 and no coaxiality control. A couple of holes diameter .063 position diameter .015 (on proto print) connect the grooves to vacuum on the underside.
Question 2, given the tolerance build up from the +- dimensions I’m thinking a surface profile tolerance would actually be better, and it would address the coaxiality. I’m thinking .030 which roughly matches the current radial groove tolerance would make sense. Sound reasonable?
On the far side it has 3x ½ inch long V grooves for a kinematic mount.
Question 3 Would surface profile sound good for these as well?
Sorry for the questions but someone far more experienced/knowledgeable than I looked at an earlier draft and didn’t add any of these controls. I think most of the features were added since he looked at the earlier print but the 3 V grooves were probably there and the top was I think already 9 surfaces but flatness was called out.
Thanks all,
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...
I’ve called out the outer ‘ring’ surface as datum A and made all 339 (yes I checked and that’s how many surfaces are created by the grooves) profile of a surface .0002 to A (we’ve apparently had samples made so I assume the tolerance is held) based on what ASME Y14.5M-1994 says in 6.5.6.1. The prototype print had flatness which isn’t correct for multiple surfaces.
Question 1 does this make sense, have I applied the standard correctly?
At the moment the proto print has the grooves dimensioned with +- dims. The cross sections of all 39 grooves are R.03 +- .01. The ‘spokes’ are 15° spacing +-.5° running from the inner radial groove to the outer one (which at their outermost point is +-.047 based on outermost ring having diameter of 10.75 if my math’s right, taking into account the stack of the 23 x 15° dimensions then the last groove could be off 11.5° or 23*.047, more than one inch!). The radial grooves had diameters +-.005 and no coaxiality control. A couple of holes diameter .063 position diameter .015 (on proto print) connect the grooves to vacuum on the underside.
Question 2, given the tolerance build up from the +- dimensions I’m thinking a surface profile tolerance would actually be better, and it would address the coaxiality. I’m thinking .030 which roughly matches the current radial groove tolerance would make sense. Sound reasonable?
On the far side it has 3x ½ inch long V grooves for a kinematic mount.
Question 3 Would surface profile sound good for these as well?
Sorry for the questions but someone far more experienced/knowledgeable than I looked at an earlier draft and didn’t add any of these controls. I think most of the features were added since he looked at the earlier print but the 3 V grooves were probably there and the top was I think already 9 surfaces but flatness was called out.
Thanks all,
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...