Powerhound,
I will have to look into this data you have provided me. I currently do not have a copy of the book to which you have utalized as to your source of referance. I will order a copy on Monday. As for your statment as to renaming the view as "acceptable but not checkable", I would agree with you. That statment is made better, though I was sent the dwg and just added the comments at the bottom. I did not even read into it for grammer puroses. As for the ME, I know for fact he has taken the courses and got certified years ago when I was young. I know this only because he, along with my father, was always quizing me on ISO, ANSI, and ASME documents. (Never tell someone what you may want to be when you grow up, you just may not like the outcome,) I dispised it, mainly because they only wanted to have me, shall I say, qoute the standards (the basic stuff) and memorize their sections (teaching me would have been prefered). I will mention though, that he has rarley ever let me down. On the otherhand, he was rather confused as to seeing the datum callouts in the current standard (he's use to the rectangle with the letter between the dashes). Also, he is retired, so perhapes he is loseing it these days? I will defenatly look further into this, as far as i can see though, no where in the standards does it state that just because it looks to be cenered, it shall be understood in that mannor, thus the "implied" intent is not finite. That is the real question in debate. I am not disregarding your referance, but I can not consider it to be finite without performing an in-depth analysis of your afromentioned referance. I will say that i have heard a great deal as to that book being very intuitve and explanitory.
On a side note, I jsut read thrugh the entire GD&T portion (basically 75%) of the Y14.5-1994 (Reaffirmed 2004) verion once again to verify his statments agenst the aapplicable stadard our company is attempting, key word there,to follow. No where does it stat that his definition may have been misconstruded. But like I said, I will still get a copy of the afromentioned book for utalization and scrutiney.
Last thing, and I do not mean to be sharp, may I point out, that just because showing a center mark in the middle of a feature pattern whoms centerlines look to be centered within a given set of datum planes, that one can not guarentee it's centering upon the FCF's referanced datums. take for instance that the designer/draftsman was drawing the part and placed the holes on the part. By the way, dimensing is always done after modeling the part. Then he proceeds to model the rest of the part in question. Upon completion, he then proceeds to work on the rest of the assy to which the part gets applied to. After may hours, and/or days of work, the task of dimensioning the part begins. Just because he drew them in what appers to be centered, he just uses the FCF Positional tolerance callout and leaves the centering lines. What if the holes were built as "implied" centered yet were actually .010 off center? This is what GD&T is suppose to prevent. So the unofically documented "implied" centered, should truly never be allowed. Now if it were a adopted practice, and prperly documented as such, then I would have no problem with it. The point of this post was that a part in question was improperly specifying a patterns symmatry along a pair of perpindicular datum planes.
All-in-all, I do than you for your consideration into this matter, and do take your comments with great consideration. Perhapes everyone should write the ASME committee about this topic, and have then defin it it the best, and most accurate and majoraly accepted mannor. I would love to have this debate put to rest by the standards.
V/R
Nathan
CAD Technician/ISO Director
Compass Systems, Inc. (
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