MattBD
Bioengineer
- Jan 26, 2007
- 62
I am designing a cylindrical fixture with a flat cut into part of it. There is a hole sunk into this flat (not a through hole).
I have the cylindrical diameter as datum A and the bottom flat as datum B. The bottom of the hole is the other important surface in this fixture, but I am confused as to how to describe it.
I thought to use a basic dimension from the centerline to the bottom of the hole, and call a profile tolerance on the surface at the bottom of the hole. However, I wasn't sure if a planar feature could be dimensioned from an axis in this manner. All points at the bottom of the hole are NOT equidistant from the axis.
Instead, I'm currently calling perpendicularity to datum B with a +/- size dimension ... though if I hold that dimension tight enough, does perpendicularity get me anything?
Thanks for the help yet again,
Matt

I have the cylindrical diameter as datum A and the bottom flat as datum B. The bottom of the hole is the other important surface in this fixture, but I am confused as to how to describe it.
I thought to use a basic dimension from the centerline to the bottom of the hole, and call a profile tolerance on the surface at the bottom of the hole. However, I wasn't sure if a planar feature could be dimensioned from an axis in this manner. All points at the bottom of the hole are NOT equidistant from the axis.
Instead, I'm currently calling perpendicularity to datum B with a +/- size dimension ... though if I hold that dimension tight enough, does perpendicularity get me anything?
Thanks for the help yet again,
Matt