Frank -- agreed!
to lkiefer: To apply profile of a surface might be fairly easy. But restedup mentioned the two important factors in his post. Any profile tolerance must be applied to a shape that is already defined with perfect dimensions. These can be displayed on the drawing as boxed dimensions (called "basic dimensions") or for complex shapes you can appeal to the CAD model for the perfect dimensions but the drawing/print should have a note stating something such as, "all undefined features are basic and are defined in the CAD model."
The other key factor is datums. A profile tolerance must have a symbol in the first compartment of the feature control frame, and a number in the second compartment. But any datum letters after that are optional. Without datum references, profile merely controls shape (and often size, too). But it wouldn't control the feature's location relative to the rest of the part. I don't know for your application if that's important to be held to the same accuracy as the shape/size.
If you choose to add datum references, doing so would "anchor" the profile tolerance zone to the bigger picture of what is important to the part. Of course, you would have to determine those datums and label them as A, B, C, or whatever. It might be tempting to call the centerline (the horizontal line in the picture) as a datum, but be careful -- you'd really want to identify the physical feature that the center line derives from as the datum feature.
Sorry so long-winded.
John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems