drdherl
Mechanical
- Sep 4, 2008
- 11
My Saga continues.
I'm sure the economy will be booming before this gets behind me.
I'm wondering if I'm getting stuck in terminology, semantics or just beaurocratic bs.
I had posted a question not long ago, stating that my dftg department is now mandating that we not put hard dimensions on our interface drawings. Despite never doing this in past, they are now mandating that we put reference dims and ref tols on Interface dwgs. After much debate, I'm now being told that if I change the title of my dwgs from interface dwgs to design parameter dwgs, I can leave the hard dims. Something seems amiss. It seems like no value is added to the argument to just call the dwg a different name.
I'm wondering whether we've been misusing the term Interface control dwgs for eons.
Does an interface control dwg typically define both halves of the interface or does it only define one half? I typically see only one half of the interface except for occasional notes "shall mate with p/n xxx".
If I want a dwg to define one half, am I really trying to create a design parameter dwg?
Remember...my initial intent is to have a single drawing that defines (and puts under config control) the binding form, fit requirements of one half of a mated assembly. I'd like my requirements database to say...."widget shall conform to dwg xxx". Since supplier is in same company, I cannot callout SCD or part no of part being ordered.
I do not want drawing to be used as primary inspection mechanism for production, as I would prefer that parts be inspected on lowest level fab dwgs. I do want ability to use it for inspection for sampling design verification.
Basic question....What are examples of when one would create an interface Dwg vs a Design Parameter dwg?
drdherl
I'm sure the economy will be booming before this gets behind me.
I'm wondering if I'm getting stuck in terminology, semantics or just beaurocratic bs.
I had posted a question not long ago, stating that my dftg department is now mandating that we not put hard dimensions on our interface drawings. Despite never doing this in past, they are now mandating that we put reference dims and ref tols on Interface dwgs. After much debate, I'm now being told that if I change the title of my dwgs from interface dwgs to design parameter dwgs, I can leave the hard dims. Something seems amiss. It seems like no value is added to the argument to just call the dwg a different name.
I'm wondering whether we've been misusing the term Interface control dwgs for eons.
Does an interface control dwg typically define both halves of the interface or does it only define one half? I typically see only one half of the interface except for occasional notes "shall mate with p/n xxx".
If I want a dwg to define one half, am I really trying to create a design parameter dwg?
Remember...my initial intent is to have a single drawing that defines (and puts under config control) the binding form, fit requirements of one half of a mated assembly. I'd like my requirements database to say...."widget shall conform to dwg xxx". Since supplier is in same company, I cannot callout SCD or part no of part being ordered.
I do not want drawing to be used as primary inspection mechanism for production, as I would prefer that parts be inspected on lowest level fab dwgs. I do want ability to use it for inspection for sampling design verification.
Basic question....What are examples of when one would create an interface Dwg vs a Design Parameter dwg?
drdherl