Hi All,
Here are some thoughts.
I would question the use of the diameter symbol for anything other than a cylindrical feature. So in LargeNCharge86's drawing, I wouldn't apply the diameter symbol. I agree with J-P that we don't know exactly what would have to be within a cylindrical zone, in other words there is no definition of the "center" of an oblong slot.
J-P,
Your NoDiameter graphic with the cylindrical hole and no diameter symbol is interesting - you may have found a case where Y14.5's rules are not entirely self-consistent. I think that the drawing makes sense and should be legal - the surface interpretation is well defined. Without the diameter symbol, there would be no axis interpretation. However, I would also say that the drawing would likely be misinterpreted - the reader might think that it's part of some kind of bidirectional spec and the other FCF is missing, or that the diameter symbol was unintentionally omitted.
We may need to be more rigorous on terminology here. Where you said "no diameter symbol, so the position zone isn't cylindrical and isn't rectangular", I believe that you meant the position boundary that the surface would have to conform to. But because you used the word "zone", some may have thought you were referring to a tolerance zone that the center geometry would have to conform to.
3DDave,
I see your point about the larger diagonal movement on a square or rectangular shape. This is because of Y14.5's rule that tolerance zone boundaries preserve sharp corners, is that right? Even in Fig. 8-24, the cutout could move further in the direction towards the sharp corner than it could in the direction towards the R10 corner. This is assuming that the cutout doesn't rotate at all. Defining and controlling the "center" geometry of irregular shapes quickly becomes a mess - I don't think that J-P was suggesting this. It's really only possible on regular features of size.
I'm not sure that I fully understand your reference to composite profile in the context of Fig. 7-34. I would agree, though, that the way that the boundary is calculated in 7-34 has some dodgy aspects. Offsetting in by 0.75 on the rads gets rid of some of the material from the flats, so I agree that this relaxes some of the requirement on the centerplane. The oblong slot is a special case that Y14.5 defines and the "blended tolerance" boundary isn't fully defined where the rads meet the flats.
Evan Janeshewski
Axymetrix Quality Engineering Inc.