Paul,
Yes, my picture was incomplete by intent. Some of the details added to my pics in your edits already exist on the actual drawing. I don't think I need to profile the edges to get the assumed perpendicularity or to control their size.
Regarding the first example, I misspoke before (a little bit). Although there are corner pin holes (as you drew), only one is engaged at a time (and it doesn't matter which one that is). The part is located with two pins, the second being in a slot across from the locating hole. So, I don't know if I could meaningfully reference the pin holes without making one arbitrarily important over the other. Your example would create two different datum B's, if I'm reading it correctly.
I guess the question on both your examples is whether the pattern itself should be basic? Also, your method of calling out the pattern is more intuitive to my needs, however Y14.5 says it this way "7X .500 (=3.5)" Even if I turn this basic, it concerns me that the .500 is the driving dim when I'm more interested in controlling the overall pattern of 3.5. Thoughts?
Blue,
"The two new datum holes, perhaps one at each corner of the pattern, are then used to control position for the remainder of the pattern."
The difficulty I'm having with this (and I've considered this) is that I cannot think of any way to logically fixture the part to the holes I would declare as the new datum while maintaining the symmetry of the pattern.
Both Blue and Paul,
In Paul's example two, what is the purpose of declaring the hole itself as datum B? I'm having trouble understanding how example two provides a complete callout.
Matt Lorono
CAD Engineer/ECN Analyst
Silicon Valley, CA
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