Looks like CH and Evan gave conflicting suggestions for this issue (where Ø.010 should be or is recommended to be found on the GAGE ELEMENTS) and pmarc stirred us in some other direction (projected tolerance zone)
CH and Evan and all,
What advantage or disadvantage you see for these two way of designing the gages? Why one is better than the other from your perspective?
Per Y14.5-2009/page 31: Each tolerance of orientation or position and datum reference specified for a screw thread applies to the axis of the thread derived from the pitch cylinder.
Evan,
Are you suggesting to have the PD (on ½-13 UNC thread) on the threaded gage element ground from its MMC (.4500) to .4400 (.010 positional) ? I just would like you to confirm I did understand you correctly since you said “The gage pins would (in theory) have perfect orientation and location relative to the datum feature simulator plate and shaft”
And yes, I agree with you: gage plate and gage shaft are datum feature simulators, but the gage pins are “just gage elements”.
Pmarc,
I will start with:
Q#2: Yes you are right here, but it is what it is. I don’t know how the drawing on original post (on linkedin) looks like, but on drawings I have to deal with, I don’t have the projected tolearance zone for the threaded holes. (yes, you know the old “aggrement”—if we have projected tolerance zone, nobody will understand it - so stick with the devil you know).
I picked up this subject (from linkedin) because it’s a subject of a great interest for me. I did create the picture with the original dimensions just to make it consistent and have somehow a link between those threads.
Q#3: I have to agree here with you (from a gaging perspective), but from the product engineering perspective the argument is: the minor diameter is a non-functional diameter, the mating part is not centered on the minor, but on PD and is no control (manufacturing cannot control) between PD and the minor. How far PD axis is from minor diameter axis? Don’t know and to sacrifice some of the tolerances (from .010) just for an easy (non-expensive) inspection method did not appear a very good option back them (2-3 years ago) for the projects I was involved in.
Q#1: I did not pay too much attention (lengthwise) when I created the above picture, so you could be right about “the threaded portion of the gage pin is not longer, so that its minimum length is equal to maximum gage plate thickness plus maximum depth of the threaded holes in the workpart.
My concern with this approach is that you have 4 gage pins and you will never be able to get the gage plate sitting flat on the work piece to simulate the primary datum feature A (because of the how the threads works - to thread the gage pins into the workpiece while they are threaded into the gage plate and have the gage plate sitting “perfectly” (acting as a primary datum) would not be the easiest thing to do. Just my opinion.