supergee
Mechanical
- Aug 15, 2012
- 81
So one of my students gave a .005 inch true position tolerance on a hole used to attach a P-clip that will hold a loose electrical wire. I asked why and he said because the position is not important. I had to tell him that .005 is a rather tight tolerance concidering the use of positioning a P-clip in the middle of a part. The student said : How am I suppose to know if a location tolerance is tight or not ?
Since location precision is dependent of the machining process, I used to contact my suppliers to know if my location made sense with the machining they used and have some personnal experience to guide me but... experience is what students don't have.
There is a preferred FIT list that can be easily found I Machineries Handbook, internet, etc but is there such a list that exist for true position?
Just to be clear, I am not asking how to calculate position or do stack up analysis: this I know and teach that already. Once the stack up analysis is done, or in cases where it's not required, I am trying to know if the location tolerance is hard or easy to make when using different manufacturing methods. Is there such a guide?
Since location precision is dependent of the machining process, I used to contact my suppliers to know if my location made sense with the machining they used and have some personnal experience to guide me but... experience is what students don't have.
There is a preferred FIT list that can be easily found I Machineries Handbook, internet, etc but is there such a list that exist for true position?
Just to be clear, I am not asking how to calculate position or do stack up analysis: this I know and teach that already. Once the stack up analysis is done, or in cases where it's not required, I am trying to know if the location tolerance is hard or easy to make when using different manufacturing methods. Is there such a guide?