autoguru
Automotive
- Jun 1, 2005
- 57
I'm interesting to knowing more about what determines the manufacturing cost of mechanical components.
Common sense tells that a part will get more expensive if:
1. the material is more expensive
2. the parts is larger
3. the tolerance is smaller.
But they don't really tell me how much more expensive the following process will be.
I need to make a component where a shaft goes into a hole and then fix the shaft's position in the whole (with welding). The shaft if round and the whole is round, so the angular position of the two mating parts doesn't matter. You can just randomly insert the shaft into the hole. I would assume this will be easy to manufacture.
But what if I need the shaft to go into the whole at a specific angular position? And the precision has to be within 1.5 degrees. Will this add significantly to the manufacturing cost?
Thanks
Common sense tells that a part will get more expensive if:
1. the material is more expensive
2. the parts is larger
3. the tolerance is smaller.
But they don't really tell me how much more expensive the following process will be.
I need to make a component where a shaft goes into a hole and then fix the shaft's position in the whole (with welding). The shaft if round and the whole is round, so the angular position of the two mating parts doesn't matter. You can just randomly insert the shaft into the hole. I would assume this will be easy to manufacture.
But what if I need the shaft to go into the whole at a specific angular position? And the precision has to be within 1.5 degrees. Will this add significantly to the manufacturing cost?
Thanks