mel12
Materials
- Oct 14, 2009
- 2
I am not formally trained in areas of design, drawing, GD&T, etc. What I know about GD&T, I learned mostly from reading Y14.5-1994 and looking at drawings. So my understanding is incomplete and probably often incorrect.
I recently came across an old customer print that I don't know how to interpret. The following is a stripped down version of the part. Imagine a hockey puck with a thru-hole parallel to the puck axis and a short cylindrical feature that is parallel to the puck axis and projects from one face of the puck. Neither feature is ON the puck axis. The 'A' datum is derived from one face of the puck. 'B' datum is derived from puck OD. 'C' datum is derived from cylindrical projection's OD. The cylindrical projection is constrained by the true position tolerance |dia .010 |A|B|. The thru hole then has the following true position tolerance applied to it: |dia .010(M) | A | B(M) | C |.
If I understand correctly, as the B datum feature's size deviates from MMC, the location of the axis of the B datum feature will be allowed to deviate from the location of the B datum. But how is it allowed to deviate? Can it only swing around a fixed C datum axis? Is the distance between the B and C datums fixed by the basic dimensions (or perhaps by the distance between the actual mating envelopes of the B & C datum features?), or is the C datum allowed to slide along a line passing through the B datum as the axis of the B datum feature deviates from the B datum axis?
Thanks in advance for any clarification.
I recently came across an old customer print that I don't know how to interpret. The following is a stripped down version of the part. Imagine a hockey puck with a thru-hole parallel to the puck axis and a short cylindrical feature that is parallel to the puck axis and projects from one face of the puck. Neither feature is ON the puck axis. The 'A' datum is derived from one face of the puck. 'B' datum is derived from puck OD. 'C' datum is derived from cylindrical projection's OD. The cylindrical projection is constrained by the true position tolerance |dia .010 |A|B|. The thru hole then has the following true position tolerance applied to it: |dia .010(M) | A | B(M) | C |.
If I understand correctly, as the B datum feature's size deviates from MMC, the location of the axis of the B datum feature will be allowed to deviate from the location of the B datum. But how is it allowed to deviate? Can it only swing around a fixed C datum axis? Is the distance between the B and C datums fixed by the basic dimensions (or perhaps by the distance between the actual mating envelopes of the B & C datum features?), or is the C datum allowed to slide along a line passing through the B datum as the axis of the B datum feature deviates from the B datum axis?
Thanks in advance for any clarification.