I have been arguing with the QA folks about what the ASME Y14.5M-1994 standard calls concentricity and what they are checking.
As far as I am concerned if concenctricity is called out between two cylindrical features, the median points of all correspondingly located elements have to fall within the cylindrical tolerance zone (more or less taken straight from the ASME standard). So if concentricity is specified, the median points of the entire surface in question must be generated and compared to the datum axis to ensure they all fall within the tolerance zone (as I understand it).
The issue is that our QA folks seem to have a different definition for concentricity (note that company policy is ASME Y14.5M-1994 as is stated on our drawings). When they check it on the CMM, they only check it from circle to circle in a single cross section and not over the entire surface. To make matters worse, the manual for the CMM software actually states "Use only a circle or arc. Concentricity tolerances do not apply to other types of features" i.e. cylinders. The software gives an error when attempts are made to check concentricity using cylinders.
Now it has degenerated to "this is the way we have always done it and this is the way everyone in quality control checks concentricity". I hate statements like that unless there is something backing it up, but I also know how hard it is to change things like this in manufacturing.
The problem is that the part rotates at high speed - balance is an issue - and our customer is having problems (and is disputing our concentricity methodology).
Please don't get me wrong, I am not in love with concentricity - far from it. It is a royal pain and in my humble opinion is rarely (if ever) needed and is confusing and this particular case is no exception. The surfaces should most likely be controlled by either runout or total runout (maybe a combination of the two) and a balance spec should be added to the drawing.
So am I way off base or what? Has anyone ever had to deal with concentricity and QA procedures / CMM limitations? I am probably going to change the drawing as indicated above but any guidance or experience with similar situations would be appreciated. Sorry for the rant and thanks for your patience.
JBK PE
As far as I am concerned if concenctricity is called out between two cylindrical features, the median points of all correspondingly located elements have to fall within the cylindrical tolerance zone (more or less taken straight from the ASME standard). So if concentricity is specified, the median points of the entire surface in question must be generated and compared to the datum axis to ensure they all fall within the tolerance zone (as I understand it).
The issue is that our QA folks seem to have a different definition for concentricity (note that company policy is ASME Y14.5M-1994 as is stated on our drawings). When they check it on the CMM, they only check it from circle to circle in a single cross section and not over the entire surface. To make matters worse, the manual for the CMM software actually states "Use only a circle or arc. Concentricity tolerances do not apply to other types of features" i.e. cylinders. The software gives an error when attempts are made to check concentricity using cylinders.
Now it has degenerated to "this is the way we have always done it and this is the way everyone in quality control checks concentricity". I hate statements like that unless there is something backing it up, but I also know how hard it is to change things like this in manufacturing.
The problem is that the part rotates at high speed - balance is an issue - and our customer is having problems (and is disputing our concentricity methodology).
Please don't get me wrong, I am not in love with concentricity - far from it. It is a royal pain and in my humble opinion is rarely (if ever) needed and is confusing and this particular case is no exception. The surfaces should most likely be controlled by either runout or total runout (maybe a combination of the two) and a balance spec should be added to the drawing.
So am I way off base or what? Has anyone ever had to deal with concentricity and QA procedures / CMM limitations? I am probably going to change the drawing as indicated above but any guidance or experience with similar situations would be appreciated. Sorry for the rant and thanks for your patience.
JBK PE