KENAT
Mechanical
- Jun 12, 2006
- 18,387
I’m in the US working to ASME standards. I used to work in the UK where we invoked our British Standard version of the ISO standards.
A few weeks ago I had to check a print of a new part which was a minor change from an existing part.
One main component it interfaces with is German and on the drawing references ISO2768 FEIN (fine, in case you didn’t guess
) I don’t recall ever working with this tolerance standard in the UK. I found extracts that I thought gave me what I needed on the web.
I did some tolerance studies of the interfaces and came up with big clashes at worst case.
I went back to the designer and he said that while he couldn’t argue with the numbers the old version worked etc. He contacted the vendor to verify my interpretation of the standard.
I have an email now from the vendor basically saying my interpretation is completely wrong, trouble is I don’t have ISO2768 to be sure and the way the email is worded either A. the person writing it doesn’t really know what they’re on about or B. their English just isn’t fantastic.
For instance I have part of a hole pattern, two threaded holes in line. The first is 36.66mm from the 0 ordinate. The second is 103.34mm from the 0 ordinate. Nominal spacing therefore is 66.68mm. From the extract of the ISO I found both 103.44 & 36.66 are +-.15mm. Therefore I assumed that the spacing is 66.68 +- .3 (.012”) which I was using in hole position calculations as pos dia .033”.
The vendor is saying the +-.15 applies not only to the holes relative to the 0 ordinate but also their spacing to each other. So if one moves away to be maximum distance from 0, the other at least has to be on nominal or further away from 0 etc.
Does anyone know if the vendor is right, or can point to a website where this is explained? (I need to give the designer an answer in the next few days and am not sure I can justify buying the standard or get it in time.)
Further does this ISO say anything about assumed coaxiality or position tolerance of circular features (holes)?
It’s bad enough trying to work out the drawing given it’s 1st angle projection and my brains stuck in 3rd, the addition of this tolerance is just icing on the cake;-).
Thanks for any assistance.
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...
A few weeks ago I had to check a print of a new part which was a minor change from an existing part.
One main component it interfaces with is German and on the drawing references ISO2768 FEIN (fine, in case you didn’t guess
I did some tolerance studies of the interfaces and came up with big clashes at worst case.
I went back to the designer and he said that while he couldn’t argue with the numbers the old version worked etc. He contacted the vendor to verify my interpretation of the standard.
I have an email now from the vendor basically saying my interpretation is completely wrong, trouble is I don’t have ISO2768 to be sure and the way the email is worded either A. the person writing it doesn’t really know what they’re on about or B. their English just isn’t fantastic.
For instance I have part of a hole pattern, two threaded holes in line. The first is 36.66mm from the 0 ordinate. The second is 103.34mm from the 0 ordinate. Nominal spacing therefore is 66.68mm. From the extract of the ISO I found both 103.44 & 36.66 are +-.15mm. Therefore I assumed that the spacing is 66.68 +- .3 (.012”) which I was using in hole position calculations as pos dia .033”.
The vendor is saying the +-.15 applies not only to the holes relative to the 0 ordinate but also their spacing to each other. So if one moves away to be maximum distance from 0, the other at least has to be on nominal or further away from 0 etc.
Does anyone know if the vendor is right, or can point to a website where this is explained? (I need to give the designer an answer in the next few days and am not sure I can justify buying the standard or get it in time.)
Further does this ISO say anything about assumed coaxiality or position tolerance of circular features (holes)?
It’s bad enough trying to work out the drawing given it’s 1st angle projection and my brains stuck in 3rd, the addition of this tolerance is just icing on the cake;-).
Thanks for any assistance.
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...