greenimi
Mechanical
- Nov 30, 2011
- 2,403
I have a question for the group: the part I would like to talk about it’s a shaft with a weird thru irregular feature. The axis of one radius is datum A and the axis of the other radius is datum B.
If you have the centerline on the part:
Datum feature A, radius -left side from the centerline – will generate a datum axis on the other side of CL—on the right side.
And similar, datum feature B (radius, datum feature on the right side of CL) will generate a datum axis on the left side. See sketch with red and blue centerlines.
It’s a coaxial control which locates and orients two tolerance zones to a single datum axis.
I was told this is the design intent and reflects the functionality of the product (there is a mating part which go inside this irregular feature and the mating part has the same construction).
See the profile callouts depicted:
Datum feature A: profile .004 wrt A-B
Datum feature B: profile .004 wrt A-B
Datum feature C: profile .003 wrt A-B
Profile of bottom surface wrt A-B and C
The questions I have:
1.) Is those valid GD&T callouts? I think so, but I just want to double check.
2.) How we can measure the profile callout? How to establish DRF between A-B on the CMM, for example?
3.) Could be a common misunderstanding in the industry, but both datum feature A and B are referencing a location back to themselves. I am almost sure (but not convinced, and that’s the purpose of the question) that is not the case here, and the datum feature A and B are NOT referencing back to themselves. Any help to shoot some lights here?
Thank you
If you have the centerline on the part:
Datum feature A, radius -left side from the centerline – will generate a datum axis on the other side of CL—on the right side.
And similar, datum feature B (radius, datum feature on the right side of CL) will generate a datum axis on the left side. See sketch with red and blue centerlines.
It’s a coaxial control which locates and orients two tolerance zones to a single datum axis.
I was told this is the design intent and reflects the functionality of the product (there is a mating part which go inside this irregular feature and the mating part has the same construction).
See the profile callouts depicted:
Datum feature A: profile .004 wrt A-B
Datum feature B: profile .004 wrt A-B
Datum feature C: profile .003 wrt A-B
Profile of bottom surface wrt A-B and C
The questions I have:
1.) Is those valid GD&T callouts? I think so, but I just want to double check.
2.) How we can measure the profile callout? How to establish DRF between A-B on the CMM, for example?
3.) Could be a common misunderstanding in the industry, but both datum feature A and B are referencing a location back to themselves. I am almost sure (but not convinced, and that’s the purpose of the question) that is not the case here, and the datum feature A and B are NOT referencing back to themselves. Any help to shoot some lights here?
Thank you