steveapathy
Mechanical
- Jan 2, 2014
- 14
I have designed a part containing both GD&T and ordinate dimensions. I have the edges of the part (an irregular shape, but mostly orthogonal) all defined by ordinate dimensions from a common origin, which is the primary locating hole in the part. Since a hole provides no rotational reference, the orientation of the part during measurement is not totally clear.
The part itself is assembled using this hole (near the bottom right corner of the part) as the primary locator, and a slot (near the top left corner of the part, in line with the hole) as the rotational control. For the purposes of the GD&T positional callouts, I have the hole as datum B, and the slot as datum C. Datum A is the large flat surface of the part.
When this part is inspected, they would most likely just use one of the long vertical edges to align the "y" axis, and measure all linear dimensions based on that orientation. Since the edge isn't what aligns my part in my assembly, that's not really capturing design intent. What I really want them to do, however, is align the part based on |A|B|C| prior to measuring linear dimensions from the alignment hole.
I know that a line profile all around my part would fulfill this need, but the vendor we receive the part from is insistent on having it defined by linear dimensions for inspection and qualification purposes.
Does anybody have any advice on how I can make it clear how to orient the part during measurement?
I included a made up part that illustrates what my part is like (made quickly, so ignore the fact that it's not fully defined... the real part has other features with a positional GD&T callout using |A|B|C|).
The part itself is assembled using this hole (near the bottom right corner of the part) as the primary locator, and a slot (near the top left corner of the part, in line with the hole) as the rotational control. For the purposes of the GD&T positional callouts, I have the hole as datum B, and the slot as datum C. Datum A is the large flat surface of the part.
When this part is inspected, they would most likely just use one of the long vertical edges to align the "y" axis, and measure all linear dimensions based on that orientation. Since the edge isn't what aligns my part in my assembly, that's not really capturing design intent. What I really want them to do, however, is align the part based on |A|B|C| prior to measuring linear dimensions from the alignment hole.
I know that a line profile all around my part would fulfill this need, but the vendor we receive the part from is insistent on having it defined by linear dimensions for inspection and qualification purposes.
Does anybody have any advice on how I can make it clear how to orient the part during measurement?
I included a made up part that illustrates what my part is like (made quickly, so ignore the fact that it's not fully defined... the real part has other features with a positional GD&T callout using |A|B|C|).