ofted42
Mechanical
- Aug 26, 2008
- 6
Morning Everyone,
Been doing GD&T for a while but it's been a while since I've tackled castings/forgings. I'm looking for some advice on GD&T setup for an idler wheel I'm working on. The part is a forging that is then 100% machined down to the part as used on the machine. The bore is pinned through and a belt rides on the outer diameter. Outer two faces are thrust faces.
Currently the forging and machining are all +/- toleranced, but I'd like to put together GD&t that would allow for better control of the part and better inspection. My initial thought is to use one of the two large diameter side faces as the primary forging datum and the outer diameter as the secondary. From there you'd machine the pin bore and one of the thrust faces. Then you could use those two datums to control the orientation as you machine the other portions, controlling the flat faces and diameters through runout and position. However, that seems overly cumbersome to me. I would think you could control the face dimensions by using overall width dimensions and possibly using positional to control their center planes relative to each other.
Not sure if that made sense, the picture shows the forging and the finished machining. Any tips on how to lay this out would be much appreciated.
Thanks
Been doing GD&T for a while but it's been a while since I've tackled castings/forgings. I'm looking for some advice on GD&T setup for an idler wheel I'm working on. The part is a forging that is then 100% machined down to the part as used on the machine. The bore is pinned through and a belt rides on the outer diameter. Outer two faces are thrust faces.
Currently the forging and machining are all +/- toleranced, but I'd like to put together GD&t that would allow for better control of the part and better inspection. My initial thought is to use one of the two large diameter side faces as the primary forging datum and the outer diameter as the secondary. From there you'd machine the pin bore and one of the thrust faces. Then you could use those two datums to control the orientation as you machine the other portions, controlling the flat faces and diameters through runout and position. However, that seems overly cumbersome to me. I would think you could control the face dimensions by using overall width dimensions and possibly using positional to control their center planes relative to each other.
Not sure if that made sense, the picture shows the forging and the finished machining. Any tips on how to lay this out would be much appreciated.
Thanks