Tarator (Automotive) said:
21 Sep 13 20:08
Hexagon (internal or external doesn't matter) is NOT a regular FOS... See the attached image. Does the orange line belong to Surface A or B? It would have different opposing element depending on which surface it belongs.
But I would argue that the sketch is NOT defined by anything "inside" a true circle - a circle defined by a diameter that is. That sketch has two irregular sides of six possible sides, and the entire figure isn't symmetrical within a hexagon at all.
Given the original problem, I would
NOT argue about the definition of the hexagon as a figure, but rather argue strongly about how to ensure the gadget is always machined to the needed size to the needed accuracy. So, if it were to be operated by a 3/4 inch wrench, the "flats" dimension (not the length of each flat) is critical and MUST be defined with tolerances.
If, on the other hand, the 'socket" hole is important (as if the final gadget were to operated by a hex head wrench), the both the hex cross-section and "flat-to-flat" and "length of flats" and "angular accuracy of the flats" ARE ALL important and need to be defined. If any of these values are off by more than the tolerance, the hex key will not fit in the opening, the hex key flats will not turn all sides of the operator evenly, or the hex key will bind against the opening edges. In both of these example cases, and you will easily find others, the "diameter that the hex fits inside of" is strictly a nominal number and if used in those dimensions at all, is used only as a reference place to start the "important" measurements.