pmarc said:
Technically, what you call the "leader line" for the perpendicularity tolerance in fig. 3-29 is not a leader line. It is the extension line of the dimension line (see para. 3.5(d)).
I am sorry for my dyslexia. And thank you again for the proper correction.
pmarc said:
For what it is worth, I personally understand why there are people that say that runout FCF should not be associated with a size dimension. But I also know there are individuals that think this is not a problem at all.
Looks like some folks won the battle because in fig 6-30 (2018) size and runout are “divorced” (unlike its equivalent 3-29 from 2009 within which size and runout are still “married”)
At the cursory level, I couldn’t find the proper verbiage (in 2018) for this separation, but I am sure I haven’t looked hard enough. The appropriate text might be there (I hope) in 2018 standard.
If you know it from the top of your head, please let me know where should I look for this written/ text requirement or explanation.
pmarc said:
I am not so sure the standard should exclude orientation tolerances from the simultaneous requirements rule, but that's a slighlty different topic.
.....or maybe at least runout to be included (if not all the orientation tolerances).(--Just me adding to your statement--)
I've seen (on different forums and discussions) experts complaining
more about the runout than the orientations….But you might have your reasons, because knowledge is out of the question
Speaking about runout: Never seen any ISO examples (ISO 1101, ISO 5458) where runout is used with SIM. (and yes, I’ve seen orientation tolerances - parallelism mostly - used with CZ).
Pamrc,
My last question for this week:
For example if fig 9-6 / 2009 was per ISO GPS, then would be a difference between:
- total runout with CZ inside the FCF’s and multi-leader line approach (only one FCF)
And
- 4 (four) separate runout FCF’s with SIM’s under each of them ?
(I am only talking about the total runout shown with multiple leader lines –there is only one--shown in the rightmost upper corner of the picture)
Thank you and have a great weekend.