greenimi
Mechanical
- Nov 30, 2011
- 2,407
I seen a drawing where the OD and ID of a cylindrical /helical compression (with closed ground ends) spring are controlled with perpendicularity? Is this even a valid callout?
Datum feature A is the free length and OD and well the ID have a perpendicularity callout in .010(M) with A(M).
How the orientation can even be controlled? Can the maximum side deflection be even keep under control this way or you have seen a better way to do it? Any other suggestions?
I kind of know what the engineers are looking for in this case: the spring is sitting between 2 plates with a shaft going thru its ID and a bushing over its OD. The idea is to not let the spring rub against the shaft (ID) or the bushing (OD), so the deflection/ tilt of the spring must somehow be in some tolerance.
Any other good examples or standard to be used?
Datum feature A is the free length and OD and well the ID have a perpendicularity callout in .010(M) with A(M).
How the orientation can even be controlled? Can the maximum side deflection be even keep under control this way or you have seen a better way to do it? Any other suggestions?
I kind of know what the engineers are looking for in this case: the spring is sitting between 2 plates with a shaft going thru its ID and a bushing over its OD. The idea is to not let the spring rub against the shaft (ID) or the bushing (OD), so the deflection/ tilt of the spring must somehow be in some tolerance.
Any other good examples or standard to be used?