Tolerances.
Tolerances.
(OP)
Sorry if this is enquiry is below this forum, but I am a keen-to-learn amateur, and new to all this.
I have searched for references and tables of interference and assembly tolerences. Elsewhere, someone pointed out the Machinery's Handbook. Unfortunately I do not have one, nor can justify the cost of one.
Can anyone here help please?
I have searched for references and tables of interference and assembly tolerences. Elsewhere, someone pointed out the Machinery's Handbook. Unfortunately I do not have one, nor can justify the cost of one.
Can anyone here help please?





RE: Tolerances.
RE: Tolerances.
The reason I am asking is that I was told, according to some casters, that there are may ways to specify this.
Thanks.
RE: Tolerances.
gearguru
RE: Tolerances.
Its ok we were all there once,I myself find tolerances a bit hard to tolerate(pardon the pun)myself
but i bought a book by AW Boundy called Engineering Drawing 6 and it has all the tolerances in it.Explains what they are and offers detailed descriptions on what they are used for ,also what type of fit you can expect.
It is a BIBLE for any enthusiast or drafter.
Good luck
RE: Tolerances.
Interference and running fits and such require a bit more consideration, and geometric tolerancing can push a lot of cost into a product by constraining the producer to tighter tolerances or more expensive processes than the product's utility requires.
Hobbyists will be content to putter about or polish to achieve the desired tolerance and/or finish. (No disrespect intended, most professionals have a bit of hobbist in them! :) )
Professionals do not have this luxury. My advice would be to get out from behind the desk/terminal and spend time out on the shop floor. Experienced machinists and foremen will be your greatest allies.
RE: Tolerances.
This page http://www.cybermetrics.com/GDTFont/GDT_OVR.HTM will give you a bit of a guide.
BTW, if your serious about your hobby, buy a copy of Machinery's. It is expensive, but it's the only book you will ever need. It will tell you EVERYTHING, and I still refer to it most days.
Excessive accuaracy is a sign of poor breeding. -Socrates.
RE: Tolerances.
Falcon4
RE: Tolerances.
RE: Tolerances.
What is not good, and is all too easy with CAD, is to stumble along applying the same tolerance for any situation, no matter what. The largest tolerances that will assure functionality are the correct ones. Quite often, the less experienced designer/draftsman/engineer will over-constrain to cover their tracks when they are unsure.
I get prints constantly that are not properly dimensioned or toleranced. The people making these things cannot be bothered with understanding the part's functionality. Much of that understanding will come from experience and cross-pollinization. By the way, this situation is nothing new. I've been in manufacturing for 20+ years and not much has changed.
RE: Tolerances.