ewh
Aerospace
- Mar 28, 2003
- 6,147
israelkk,
Don't think of it as a debate. The standard is a complex one, and I'd say that most of the people who use it don't understand it fully. I definitely don't, but I do have a basic working knowledge of it and turn to the standard often to improve my understanding of it. The worst thing we can do if we don't understand why something is toleranced the way it is is to blindly accept that because it's been used that way before, it must be correct.
You are correct in that you can use basic dimensions without establishing features, by using other dimensional tolerances. Examples are angularity and taper. I have gotten into the habit of establishing datums before I dimension, thus my erroneous comment.
However, to properly use a geometric tolerance on a hole, you must establish what that tolerance is relative to, which would be datum(s). It can't be relative to itself.
For true position, per Y14.5M-1994, para 5.2.1.3, "It is necessary to identify features on a part to establish datums for dimensions locating true positions." For your example to be correct, one of the holes would have to be a datum, and the others located relative to that.
I am definitely open to correction on this, to better understand the standard myself. I won't accept "because that's how it's done" as a valid reason, but will gladly accept any argument documented by the standard.
Eric
Don't think of it as a debate. The standard is a complex one, and I'd say that most of the people who use it don't understand it fully. I definitely don't, but I do have a basic working knowledge of it and turn to the standard often to improve my understanding of it. The worst thing we can do if we don't understand why something is toleranced the way it is is to blindly accept that because it's been used that way before, it must be correct.
You are correct in that you can use basic dimensions without establishing features, by using other dimensional tolerances. Examples are angularity and taper. I have gotten into the habit of establishing datums before I dimension, thus my erroneous comment.
However, to properly use a geometric tolerance on a hole, you must establish what that tolerance is relative to, which would be datum(s). It can't be relative to itself.
For true position, per Y14.5M-1994, para 5.2.1.3, "It is necessary to identify features on a part to establish datums for dimensions locating true positions." For your example to be correct, one of the holes would have to be a datum, and the others located relative to that.
I am definitely open to correction on this, to better understand the standard myself. I won't accept "because that's how it's done" as a valid reason, but will gladly accept any argument documented by the standard.
Eric