Additionally there is the following in 4.9 of Y14.5-2009:
*The relationships between datum features
to be considered are the
(a) form of the primary datum feature(s) (see Figs. 4-2
and 4-5) and/or the location between features in a pattern
used to establish the primary datum. See Figs. 4-24
and 4-25.
(b) secondary datum features’ orientation and/or
location as applicable, to higher precedence datums. See
Figs. 4-2, 4-5, 4-26, and 4-30.
(c) tertiary datum features’ orientation and/or location
to higher precedence datums as applicable. See
Figs. 4-2 and 4-5.
However this does not have as strong a wording as the preceding statement in the 2018 version as pointed out by JP.
greenimi 17 Apr 19 13:34 said:
Enough data cannot be gathered to validate the perpendicularity.
This is I think the sticking point for me too, I understand a secondary datum needs to be oriented relative to the primary, but if its not measurable - or even if it is but theres not much value in actually measuring it, one could get into a little bit of trouble.
JP - what would your solution in this case be? Would it be to put an arbitrarily large perpendicular tolerance on the feature so that anyone looking at the print (ie: a supplier quoting a job) knows that it does not need to be directly inspected as it would be well within any reasonable process limits or maybe actually putting such a note ("NOT REQUIRED FOR PART ACCEPTANCE") on the perpendicularity tolerance?
*Edit: added to the quote from 4.9 in Y14.5-2009 as it didn't seem to make sense without context