My $.02
I have a degree in mechantronic engineering. But I consider myself a mechanical engineer w/ a good foundation in electronics.
Graduated in 07 w/ a lot of projects under my belt and my own business making sand cast intake manifolds and patterns.
I never took a drafting class. It wasn't required. I took the first solidworks class the university offered and they took it as credit for the autocad class.
I managed to get a job as a contractor (MCAD) for a large consumer electronics company. I worked w/ some other contractors that were awesome, the older guys were former military supplier engineers. Great and taught me so much. After working there for a year? more?
I snuck into a GD&T class that they had an outside presenter offering (technically I wasn't eligible to take because I was a contractor, not an employee)
THIS 2 DAY CLASS WAS LIFE CHANGING. It just totally changed the way I think about the design itself.
WHY ISN'T THIS TAUGHT IN SCHOOL? MANDITORY??? You guys are bashing the younger, cheap guys...but the #$^% just isn't taught in school. So teach the j@#$%^! Pay for classes for you employees. Sooner rather than later. Yes your bloody contractors too!
I'd trust a new kid, green around the gills that had just taken his class over an old block tolerance guy.
I'll shameless plug the guy from GEOTOL. I didn't pay for it, I can only imagine he's expensive. It was the best presentation of any kind on any topic I've ever been a part of. I'm trying to organize any of my classmates to get together and pay for a group class together.
I believe with the right training so many things would change. Parts would go together the first time, they'd be cheaper to make, etc. etc. Preaching to the choir, I know.
Now I'm working at a company where GD&T is a bad word. Seriously I was told to 'take all that crap off' and just block tolerance everything. EWWEEEEEE. I tell them I can't, I have to redesign some things because the tolerance loop won't work. I get this glazed over look...I honestly don't think that anyone here in our dept (half dozen experienced ME's) know what a tolerance loop is.
We have no checkers. Technically 2 of the bosses are supposed to check every drawing. (yeah right, we automatically just put their initials on the drawing when we start)
I started here in December and when it came time to do my first drafting, I asked around, looking for someone to go over my drawings to tell me how to fit into the corporate standard. My boss finally assigned one guy to check them. I got one guy (an Austrian raised on ISO and DIN standards) to give me a glazed over look (doesn't understand GD&T or tolerance loops) and say 'cool, ship em'.'
a month later after the shop kicks back the drawings w/ the GD&T on em' because 'YOU CAN'T HAVE A ZERO POSITION TOLERANCE'. (actually a 0M - sloppy loose tolerances) the boss looks at em and takes a red pen to em' that looks like he slit his wrist on the thing.
(His corrections were all corporate style or in some cases just wrong or stupid - remove the note that says dimensions apply after coating, that's gonna make it too hard to make)
So frustrating.
To answer the question du jour. My current strategy for checking drawings is four times.
Usually I'm not releasing one part, but several all at once.
I get each drawing done until I think it's done.
Then go back to the first one (in cad)
check it.
If I find one error, I go through all.
Then again. Usually one error.
Export the PDF's. Things look different in PDF's than in CAD.
Check em'.
Then I print them out.
Looks so much different.
Then I after that I just get embarrassed when they're fubar.
J