sgjoachim
Mechanical
- Jun 4, 2015
- 3
Hi Everyone -- I have a question about specifying a GD&T datum at the 0-0 of an ordinate dimension scheme. The 0-0 is specified at the center of a hole, so is it correct to call out the horizontal 0 as datum B and the vertical 0 as datum C, assuming a perpendicular surface is already datum A?
We are having many a discussion about this at work, but I can't find examples of this in the Y14.5 spec. According to the spec, I would think you'd want datum A to be a perpendicular surface, datum B to be the hole itself, and datum C to be a vertical or horizontal surface to lock down rotation. That said, we have found examples in released industry specs showing the datum on the 0-0.
So is this a correct place to put a datum? If so, what is the datum? Is it a theoretical vertical (or horizontal) plane through the axis of the hole?
To help visualize the part, you can think of a flat metal plate that has several mounting bosses and features on it. The drawing view would be looking head-on at the mounting bosses and trying to use one of them to define the features control frame (in all directions except into/out of the page).
We are having many a discussion about this at work, but I can't find examples of this in the Y14.5 spec. According to the spec, I would think you'd want datum A to be a perpendicular surface, datum B to be the hole itself, and datum C to be a vertical or horizontal surface to lock down rotation. That said, we have found examples in released industry specs showing the datum on the 0-0.
So is this a correct place to put a datum? If so, what is the datum? Is it a theoretical vertical (or horizontal) plane through the axis of the hole?
To help visualize the part, you can think of a flat metal plate that has several mounting bosses and features on it. The drawing view would be looking head-on at the mounting bosses and trying to use one of them to define the features control frame (in all directions except into/out of the page).