evolDiesel
Mechanical
- Feb 29, 2008
- 93
Guys,
Hopefully this one will blow you away as much as it did me.
I have 2 individuals arguing over whether or not you show a Rev A symbol in the body of a Rev A print... to indicate what had changed, b/c in this example this new Rev A print was largely based on an old print. Is this making sense?
My take is that it is C-R-A-Z-Y to have any Rev A symbols. A Rev symbol is for indicating what changed going from the last Rev, and in the case of a "release-to-rev-A" situation... the print is brand new and has no history and if the engineer is trying to convey where the print came from, they should do that in the DCO, with reference documentation or a design journal, but it shouldn't be in the form of mysterious Rev symbols on a new print.
I mean seriously, have you ever seen a Rev A symbol??
We observe ASME Y14, and I've looked at 14.100, 14.3, and 14.35 and I can't find anything on this... which I think is an indication of how crazy this argument is... it's not even covered in the Y14.
Please chime in. Let me know if I'm the one who's crazy and of course BONUS POINTS if you can find where in Y14 it addresses a Rev A balloon.
Thanks,
Jack
Jack Lapham
Engineering Systems Administrator (E20)
Leupold & Stevens, Inc.
Dell M6400 Covet
Intel Core 2 Duo T9800, 2.93GHz, 1066MHZ 6M L2 Cache
8.0GB, DDR3-1066 SDRAM, 2 DIMM
1GB nVIDIA Quadro FX 3700M (7.15.11.7950)
160GB Hard Drive 9.5MM 7200RPM FFS
W7x64 | sw-01: 55.92
SolidWorks 2010 x64 sp4.0
Enterprise PDM 2010 sp
Hopefully this one will blow you away as much as it did me.
I have 2 individuals arguing over whether or not you show a Rev A symbol in the body of a Rev A print... to indicate what had changed, b/c in this example this new Rev A print was largely based on an old print. Is this making sense?
My take is that it is C-R-A-Z-Y to have any Rev A symbols. A Rev symbol is for indicating what changed going from the last Rev, and in the case of a "release-to-rev-A" situation... the print is brand new and has no history and if the engineer is trying to convey where the print came from, they should do that in the DCO, with reference documentation or a design journal, but it shouldn't be in the form of mysterious Rev symbols on a new print.
I mean seriously, have you ever seen a Rev A symbol??
We observe ASME Y14, and I've looked at 14.100, 14.3, and 14.35 and I can't find anything on this... which I think is an indication of how crazy this argument is... it's not even covered in the Y14.
Please chime in. Let me know if I'm the one who's crazy and of course BONUS POINTS if you can find where in Y14 it addresses a Rev A balloon.
Thanks,
Jack
Jack Lapham
Engineering Systems Administrator (E20)
Leupold & Stevens, Inc.
Dell M6400 Covet
Intel Core 2 Duo T9800, 2.93GHz, 1066MHZ 6M L2 Cache
8.0GB, DDR3-1066 SDRAM, 2 DIMM
1GB nVIDIA Quadro FX 3700M (7.15.11.7950)
160GB Hard Drive 9.5MM 7200RPM FFS
W7x64 | sw-01: 55.92
SolidWorks 2010 x64 sp4.0
Enterprise PDM 2010 sp