I had trouble interpreting a drawing when working at "Commercial Machinery Fabricators" corporation. I am a degreed engineer with a background as mechanic, machinist and machine builder as well... between jobs at the time, I was hired as a welder, then moved to the lathe when the lathe operator had a heart attack.
"Cut these shafts" said the stuporvisor [sic]... "here's the drawing."
3" dia. steel about 18" long, to be turned down on the end to.... get this...
2.500" +/- 0.000"
I kid you not.
I laughed and laughed. The stuporvisor tried to insist that the drawing was correct, and to follow it. I tried to explain that machining to a tolerance of "zero" is not even possible, but if one were lucky enough to get one part to measure exactly on spec within 0.0005" then after removing it from the machine and cooling it, the dimension would differ to outside the "spec".
Good grief.
Examining the pile of parts left by the usual operator led me to the conclusion that the actual dimension was 2.500 +0/0.020" or so. Basically, to fit into the wheel bearing w/o too much slop, er, "clearance."