cjohnso0
Mechanical
- Jul 17, 2001
- 20
Hi all,
I am trying to decipher a GD&T perpendicularity requirement we have run into.
This is a requirement while repairing a commercial CFM56-7B turbine engine accessory gearbox. The bores in question are bearing bores which locate the gears in the gearbox.
Each of the bores has a perpendicularity callout to a surface, but where we would commonly see a decimal number, there is a percent (0.10%). I have attached a sketch of one of the callouts and associated datum's (dims in inches).
Has anyone ever seen anything like this? Is this something I can rewrite into current GD&T so we can actually manufacture? We have no way to get info from the original manufacturer to discuss.
I did find one old related thread, but it was for a face to an axis I believe, and the consensus was to ignore the % sign. This is not possible in this situation, as there is no way the bores can be out more than a few thousandths of an inch to continue to function. Similar parts run around .0004 in/in between bore diameter and datum surface on other engine types.
Thanks in advance,
Chris
I am trying to decipher a GD&T perpendicularity requirement we have run into.
This is a requirement while repairing a commercial CFM56-7B turbine engine accessory gearbox. The bores in question are bearing bores which locate the gears in the gearbox.
Each of the bores has a perpendicularity callout to a surface, but where we would commonly see a decimal number, there is a percent (0.10%). I have attached a sketch of one of the callouts and associated datum's (dims in inches).
Has anyone ever seen anything like this? Is this something I can rewrite into current GD&T so we can actually manufacture? We have no way to get info from the original manufacturer to discuss.
I did find one old related thread, but it was for a face to an axis I believe, and the consensus was to ignore the % sign. This is not possible in this situation, as there is no way the bores can be out more than a few thousandths of an inch to continue to function. Similar parts run around .0004 in/in between bore diameter and datum surface on other engine types.
Thanks in advance,
Chris