Udja
Military
- Jun 10, 2015
- 3
Hello all,
I am currently trying to re-do one of our drawings with the intent of being able to hard gauge the parts during our QA. The issue is that I just don't have a firm enough grasp on GD&T to do this right, and trying to apply what I've researched is making me even more confused. So, I figured I would just see if I could ask for help.
I've attached a sketch of the section in question; it's an 8 lug pattern that is clocked 22.5 degrees from the vertical plane. ASME Y14.5M-2009 is how it's to be interpreted and it's what I've been muddling through all day. -A- through -C- are established in other drawing views on other features, but I've tried to include them to help clarify things. -A- is based off the outside diameter, -B- is parallel to the plane of the drawing view, and -C- is a vertical plane that runs through the cylinder's axis.
Again, I'm trying to get this part to where we could hard gauge the lug pattern. I've been told that the best way to do this is to use a profile tolerance, but I'm just not familiar enough with GD&T to be able to do this confidently. The drawing view attached is my best attempt. How bad is it?
Specific questions:
- Am I going about this wrong by even attempting to put a surface profile tolerance on a pattern? Again, I've never had to use much GD&T, so much of this is foreign to me. My only other thought was to simply use a surface profile on one lug and then just say "pattern 8 times equally spaced" but I felt like that left things too open-ended. On the other hand, applying a profile tolerance on the whole pattern made it so that I had to make every dimension on the part basic as each dimension will be used in the pattern...which just seems like overkill. How should this be done, if I'm off-track with both of my trains of thought?
- I've used a position tolerance on the .191 dimension.(Edit: It seems the file I uploaded actually has the surface profile symbol in the tolerance box, which is an error on my part. It's supposed to be a position symbol) This dimension and the 16 degree angle control the size of the slots; does that make the .191 a feature of size? As best I can tell, I think so, so I've used the position tolerance. Should I have used a surface profile instead? Or should it be toleranced without GD&T, with just a symmetric tolerance zone? If that changes, does the 22.5 degree dimension then become non-basic, or should it stay basic because of the profile tolerance around the whole pattern? And I don't even know what the 16 deg should be toleranced as, so I've completely guessed on that one.
- Our old dimension scheme had the two diameters on the left of the drawing view dimensioned as bilateral with +.003/-0. The inside, radial edges of the lugs, however, were toleranced symmetrically. I'd like to mimic that but I'm not sure how to go about it. I could simply change the actual part dimensions so that the diameters 'split' the old tolerance zone, but I feel like I've seen a way to call out specific sections of a surface profile as unilateral without effecting other sections of the profile.
I realize that I've asked a lot of questions, and I appreciate any help I can get. This is the first time I've actually had to ask for help because the archive of questions here is simply astounding; I can usually find what I need just by searching. I'm at a loss on this one, though, so thank you again for any help!
I am currently trying to re-do one of our drawings with the intent of being able to hard gauge the parts during our QA. The issue is that I just don't have a firm enough grasp on GD&T to do this right, and trying to apply what I've researched is making me even more confused. So, I figured I would just see if I could ask for help.
I've attached a sketch of the section in question; it's an 8 lug pattern that is clocked 22.5 degrees from the vertical plane. ASME Y14.5M-2009 is how it's to be interpreted and it's what I've been muddling through all day. -A- through -C- are established in other drawing views on other features, but I've tried to include them to help clarify things. -A- is based off the outside diameter, -B- is parallel to the plane of the drawing view, and -C- is a vertical plane that runs through the cylinder's axis.
Again, I'm trying to get this part to where we could hard gauge the lug pattern. I've been told that the best way to do this is to use a profile tolerance, but I'm just not familiar enough with GD&T to be able to do this confidently. The drawing view attached is my best attempt. How bad is it?
Specific questions:
- Am I going about this wrong by even attempting to put a surface profile tolerance on a pattern? Again, I've never had to use much GD&T, so much of this is foreign to me. My only other thought was to simply use a surface profile on one lug and then just say "pattern 8 times equally spaced" but I felt like that left things too open-ended. On the other hand, applying a profile tolerance on the whole pattern made it so that I had to make every dimension on the part basic as each dimension will be used in the pattern...which just seems like overkill. How should this be done, if I'm off-track with both of my trains of thought?
- I've used a position tolerance on the .191 dimension.(Edit: It seems the file I uploaded actually has the surface profile symbol in the tolerance box, which is an error on my part. It's supposed to be a position symbol) This dimension and the 16 degree angle control the size of the slots; does that make the .191 a feature of size? As best I can tell, I think so, so I've used the position tolerance. Should I have used a surface profile instead? Or should it be toleranced without GD&T, with just a symmetric tolerance zone? If that changes, does the 22.5 degree dimension then become non-basic, or should it stay basic because of the profile tolerance around the whole pattern? And I don't even know what the 16 deg should be toleranced as, so I've completely guessed on that one.
- Our old dimension scheme had the two diameters on the left of the drawing view dimensioned as bilateral with +.003/-0. The inside, radial edges of the lugs, however, were toleranced symmetrically. I'd like to mimic that but I'm not sure how to go about it. I could simply change the actual part dimensions so that the diameters 'split' the old tolerance zone, but I feel like I've seen a way to call out specific sections of a surface profile as unilateral without effecting other sections of the profile.
I realize that I've asked a lot of questions, and I appreciate any help I can get. This is the first time I've actually had to ask for help because the archive of questions here is simply astounding; I can usually find what I need just by searching. I'm at a loss on this one, though, so thank you again for any help!