Pmarc,
“Provoked” is a strong word, just curious.
Sometimes some obscure places in standard need further clarification in textbooks or by other means. I was wondering if I missed something.
Considering that there is no current ASME/ANSI standard to deal with untoleranced dimension, it is designers’ right (and responsibility) to clarify it on the drawing.
Y14.5 gives you lot of freedom for that – see Para. 2.11 (c), (d), and (e) - so essentially whatever you put on the drawing IS the standard.
The way I see it, untoleranced dimension is what it is – sloppy design work.
On the other hand untoleranced dimension associated with some sort of note, table, etc with tolerances specified becomes “indirectly toleranced”, “nominal”, theoretically exact”, “basic” – you pick the name.
So I don’t see a big deal if they are treated one way or another.
But to think of it:
Is it legal to say “ALL UNTOLERANCED DIMS ARE +/- .01”? Should I then round up all of my untoleranced dimensions to match the note? What about design intent?
Also, I have nothing against matching number of decimals to the ACCURACY of the tolerance, but not to the number of digits.
“.XX UNTOLERANCED DIMS ARE +/- .01” is legal,
“.XX UNTOLERANCED DIMS ARE +/- .02” is legal,
“.XX UNTOLERANCED DIMS ARE +/- .015” is not legal? I don’t think so. What if .01 is to small and .02 is too big for me?
Another thing to consider: both ASME and ISO recognize dimensions and tolerances as absolute. There is no difference between .25, .250, and .2500.
So equal number of decimals requirement is purely cosmetic anyway.
All that said, in my opinion, if you clearly and unambiguously specify your rules for untoleranced dimensions on the drawing, it’s not a big deal if dimension specified in one corner of the drawing and tolerance placed in another corner of the drawing have different number of decimals.