legrand01
Mechanical
- Jan 7, 2010
- 29
We have a few parts here that have what I feel is a questionable callout of perpendicularity of a surface with respect to a thread. The thread is normally called out as the datum and a counterbore below the thread has the perpendicularity callout. They are about to change the part in question to have a perpendicularity callout of .0005". All diameters are around 0.30"
My problem is that I don't know how this can be measured correctly. The machinists on the floor will usually take a part that has not yet been threaded and use the minor diameter as the datum. I don't feel this is correct, but at the same time I haven't a clue how you would correctly measure this feature. I would think it would be related to the pitch diameter, but how would that be measured (i.e. set up as a datum)? I don't like the idea of using plugs, because that just adds more variation.
Any ideas? Is this callout, in any form, even reasonable?
More info on how this is used: The bottom of the mating part that screws into this part squeezes a few other components together and everything is subjected to high pressure (100k psi) to check for leaks. The design engineers belief is that if the counterbore is not perpendicular to the threads then the assembly will leak. Current parts are leaking and they are reworking them with a plug screwed into the thread and a special reamer through this plug used to clean up that counterbore. Again, with no supporting measurements, only empirical results, backing up this philosophy.
My problem is that I don't know how this can be measured correctly. The machinists on the floor will usually take a part that has not yet been threaded and use the minor diameter as the datum. I don't feel this is correct, but at the same time I haven't a clue how you would correctly measure this feature. I would think it would be related to the pitch diameter, but how would that be measured (i.e. set up as a datum)? I don't like the idea of using plugs, because that just adds more variation.
Any ideas? Is this callout, in any form, even reasonable?
More info on how this is used: The bottom of the mating part that screws into this part squeezes a few other components together and everything is subjected to high pressure (100k psi) to check for leaks. The design engineers belief is that if the counterbore is not perpendicular to the threads then the assembly will leak. Current parts are leaking and they are reworking them with a plug screwed into the thread and a special reamer through this plug used to clean up that counterbore. Again, with no supporting measurements, only empirical results, backing up this philosophy.