616Nickel
Mechanical
- Jul 10, 2009
- 8
I'm the Senior Manufacturing Engineer for a mid-size electronics manufacturer, and our Mechanical Design Engineers have recently started to put GD&T tolerances in all sorts of strange places:
- 0.02" perpendicularity specs on PEM studs up to 1" long.
- 0.005"-0.015" flatness specs on machined 14" x 10.5" aluminum bezels.
- 0.010" parallelism specs between the front and rear faces of a bezel.
Now, these bezels are assembled to a sheet-metal PCB mounting plate and enclosure, and the entire thing mounts into a console. We have never had problems with poor flatness on our parts, and there is simply no reason to ask our machine shops to hold parallelism with a surface that is effectively just waving in the air. As for the PEM stud perpendicularity spec, I am told that this is to allow us to reject parts if they are damaged in shipping, and to ensure proper packing by our vendors!
Now, I used to be a Mechanical Design Engineer not so long ago, so I didn't come down in the last shower. But the trouble is that these engineers are largely insulated from the cost implications of these specs. Plus, they're quite jealous of their territory, and it's notoriously difficult to persuade them to change their drawings. So what I think I need to do is demonstrate in a pretty unambiguous way the cost impacts of adding these kind of superfluous tolerances. Are there any good sources for analyzing the cost impacts of tighter tolerances, or is it really just a matter of asking our vendors for case-by-case estimates?
- 0.02" perpendicularity specs on PEM studs up to 1" long.
- 0.005"-0.015" flatness specs on machined 14" x 10.5" aluminum bezels.
- 0.010" parallelism specs between the front and rear faces of a bezel.
Now, these bezels are assembled to a sheet-metal PCB mounting plate and enclosure, and the entire thing mounts into a console. We have never had problems with poor flatness on our parts, and there is simply no reason to ask our machine shops to hold parallelism with a surface that is effectively just waving in the air. As for the PEM stud perpendicularity spec, I am told that this is to allow us to reject parts if they are damaged in shipping, and to ensure proper packing by our vendors!
Now, I used to be a Mechanical Design Engineer not so long ago, so I didn't come down in the last shower. But the trouble is that these engineers are largely insulated from the cost implications of these specs. Plus, they're quite jealous of their territory, and it's notoriously difficult to persuade them to change their drawings. So what I think I need to do is demonstrate in a pretty unambiguous way the cost impacts of adding these kind of superfluous tolerances. Are there any good sources for analyzing the cost impacts of tighter tolerances, or is it really just a matter of asking our vendors for case-by-case estimates?