joebk
Mechanical
- Mar 15, 2007
- 61
I have a customer drawing. The part is basically a rectangular block with all edges shown at implied 90 degree angles. All tolerances are defined in the title block and ASME Y14.5-1994 is referenced in the title block. The width, thickness, and length of the part are dimensioned leaving it to the tolerance block to define the tolerances.
The part is molded and requires draft for mold release. The designer argues that the +/- angular tolerance in the title block accounts for any draft required. There are no notes regarding draft.
Here are my problems with this...
1) It is my understanding that the dimension and associated tolerance for the width of the part applies to the entire width of the part (i.e. rule 1 because the width is a feature of size). The designer argues that it applies to the width of the upper surface, not the lower allowing the angular tolerance to allow for draft. The designer's interpretation seems to contradict rule #1 yes?
2) due to the thickness of the part and the title block tolerances the angular tolerance can result in a width that exceeds the dimension and tolerance defined for the width of the part. If I am wrong in point 1 above this is a non-issue but I think this is boooogus due to laziness.
I believe I am right but I must admit the designer is so darn passionate I would like a second opinion.
So I think the real issue at hand is this; does the width tolerance control the entire width or just the upper surface?
I think the answer to this question resolves both of my problems one way or another.
Thanks for your help!
The part is molded and requires draft for mold release. The designer argues that the +/- angular tolerance in the title block accounts for any draft required. There are no notes regarding draft.
Here are my problems with this...
1) It is my understanding that the dimension and associated tolerance for the width of the part applies to the entire width of the part (i.e. rule 1 because the width is a feature of size). The designer argues that it applies to the width of the upper surface, not the lower allowing the angular tolerance to allow for draft. The designer's interpretation seems to contradict rule #1 yes?
2) due to the thickness of the part and the title block tolerances the angular tolerance can result in a width that exceeds the dimension and tolerance defined for the width of the part. If I am wrong in point 1 above this is a non-issue but I think this is boooogus due to laziness.
I believe I am right but I must admit the designer is so darn passionate I would like a second opinion.
So I think the real issue at hand is this; does the width tolerance control the entire width or just the upper surface?
I think the answer to this question resolves both of my problems one way or another.
Thanks for your help!