TokyoChris
Mechanical
- May 22, 2018
- 5
I'm a design engineer at a company in Japan and I need to design a plate in which to insert a heating element. The heater is cylindrical with a 4mm OD (+0, -0.08), and the plate is 170mm long in the direction of the heater. The manufacturer's recommendation is a hole machining clearance of "0.05 or less (one side)".
I have only limited experience, so I might just be being overzealous. I figure the hole should be as tight as possible, so as close to 4mm (+0, -0.08) as possible. I suggested 4mm H7 but my boss/supervisor insisted that it's too precise and said to just go with 4.2 (+0.05, -0.05) which is outside of the manufacturer's recommendation. Given the 170mm length of the hole, I guess it'll be gun-drilled - maybe from both ends. Concentricity isn't strictly required, but there is other geometry at each end, so a deviation of less than 0.1mm is desired.
Would that stricter tolerance really be so difficult, or is it that much more cost-effective to have a hole that size? I work in Tokyo so we run by JIS, but only loosely (it appears).
Regards,
Chris
I have only limited experience, so I might just be being overzealous. I figure the hole should be as tight as possible, so as close to 4mm (+0, -0.08) as possible. I suggested 4mm H7 but my boss/supervisor insisted that it's too precise and said to just go with 4.2 (+0.05, -0.05) which is outside of the manufacturer's recommendation. Given the 170mm length of the hole, I guess it'll be gun-drilled - maybe from both ends. Concentricity isn't strictly required, but there is other geometry at each end, so a deviation of less than 0.1mm is desired.
Would that stricter tolerance really be so difficult, or is it that much more cost-effective to have a hole that size? I work in Tokyo so we run by JIS, but only loosely (it appears).
Regards,
Chris