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Meaning of T on Concentricity 2

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SeasonLee

Mechanical
Joined
Sep 15, 2008
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TW
Please ref to the attached figure, what is the meaning of T on Concentricity callout?

Thanks for your assists

SeasonLee
 
What drafting standard is it meant to be to, ASME Y14.5M-1982?

(I love the coffee stain by the way, and I'm guessing this isn't your drawing etc. but before someone else says it, it shouldn't say reamed on the .188 dia call out.)

Posting guidelines faq731-376 (probably not aimed specifically at you)
What is Engineering anyway: faq1088-1484
 
The only T modifier I know is tangent plane and it is a "circle T". If the intent was to somehow invoke "tangent plane" then this is incorrect and cannot be checked. There should be a diameter symbol before the tolerance value so that much is wrong with this specification as well.

Powerhound, GDTP T-0419
Engineering Technician
Inventor 2010
Mastercam X5
Smartcam 11.1
SSG, U.S. Army
Taji, Iraq OIF II
 
Good point CH. Tec-ease has a tip this month about what was allowed on older standards and the word TOTAL used to be allowed in the FCF. Maybe it's a pre-1973 standard print and the T is supposed to mean "TOTAL".

Powerhound, GDTP T-0419
Engineering Technician
Inventor 2010
Mastercam X5
Smartcam 11.1
SSG, U.S. Army
Taji, Iraq OIF II
 
I agree it is most likely a left over from TIR.
Frank
 
The only one T symbol example on the 2009 STD is FIG 6-18, which is applied on parallelism callout; can we use it on the other callout? Say flatness, straightness, or …..

SeasonLee
 
What is the advantage of applying Tangent Plane to Internal Diameter?
 
Season ... Tangent plance can't be used on flatness or straightness because the definition of tangent means that it ignores flatness/straightness. It only checks the highest points (tangent plane). The circled T can be used on parallelism, perpendicularity, angularity, and even profile of a line/surface (although the standard doesn't explicitly say profile, it's implied by the note in the text). Maybe even runout could use the T.

John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
 
But, circle T can not applied on Concentricity callout for sure, right?

Season
 
Right, because of the definition of concentricity, which specifies the "median points" of diametrically opposed elements, blah, blah...

John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
 
One more question : When should we need the tangent plane symbol in FCF after stated tolerance.

Thanks

SeasonLee
 
If you want to allow the form error to be greater than the given tolerance (such as for parallelism). An example would be a simple mating surface, where we don't really care about pits/valleys, but we do care about peaks since they will make the part sit at a different angle. Don't use T if the mating surface is a sealing surface where you are are worried about leakage.

John-Paul Belanger
Certified Sr. GD&T Professional
Geometric Learning Systems
 
Thank you all, it makes me clear in a short time.

SeasonLee
 
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