Nescius
Mechanical
- Feb 27, 2016
- 234
Consider a round disk, let's say roughly the shape of a hockey puck. Let's name one flat face as datum feature A. Then, let's give a basic dimension for the thickness and control the other flat face with a profile tolerance.
To make the thought experiment cleaner, just assume that both faces are very flat and parallel, relative to the profile tolerance.
We pull the part out of a bucket, randomly oriented, and inspect the part by choosing one of the flat faces as datum feature A...the part passes. We then flip the nominally symmetrical part over and inspect again...but it fails.
I believe this is possible. If any of you agree, what then? Is the part "good" or "bad"?
To make the thought experiment cleaner, just assume that both faces are very flat and parallel, relative to the profile tolerance.
We pull the part out of a bucket, randomly oriented, and inspect the part by choosing one of the flat faces as datum feature A...the part passes. We then flip the nominally symmetrical part over and inspect again...but it fails.
I believe this is possible. If any of you agree, what then? Is the part "good" or "bad"?