jasoncwells
Aerospace
- Jun 23, 2014
- 54
Do you guys feel like it is appropriate to place a general surface profile tolerance in a general note? The concern that I have is that you don't have a leader line to apply the all-over symbol, nor is it easy to add the text "all over" under the feature control frame within the text notes. So this is what I came up with. (forgive the non-cad formatting) The primary question is, am I missing something that makes this implementation of a general tolerance a "fatal flaw?"
I've been through quite a bit of this forum looking at the various opinions on general surface profile tolerances. I have ASME Y14.5 if you have a reference that I missed. I think the idea is pretty slick. I especially like doing away with the default tolerance block with significant decimal places. (Metric with no trailing zeros, anyone?)
Perhaps I should simply forego the note and attach the feature control frame to one of my drawing views. I expect that a machinist would look at my title block with no tolerance block and then look at notes. I kind of like notes to establish "policy" for an entire drawing.
This would be my first drawing done for personal use, hence no corporate guidance to follow. I'm writing my own rules.
Thanks to all for your contributions throughout the years. You've done a tremendous service to engineers world wide. (esp KENAT, CheckerHater, drawoh, Sykes and others)
Regards,
Jason C. Wells
4. UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED, THE GENERAL TOLERANCE IS ⌓0.5ABC ALL OVER.
I've been through quite a bit of this forum looking at the various opinions on general surface profile tolerances. I have ASME Y14.5 if you have a reference that I missed. I think the idea is pretty slick. I especially like doing away with the default tolerance block with significant decimal places. (Metric with no trailing zeros, anyone?)
Perhaps I should simply forego the note and attach the feature control frame to one of my drawing views. I expect that a machinist would look at my title block with no tolerance block and then look at notes. I kind of like notes to establish "policy" for an entire drawing.
This would be my first drawing done for personal use, hence no corporate guidance to follow. I'm writing my own rules.
Thanks to all for your contributions throughout the years. You've done a tremendous service to engineers world wide. (esp KENAT, CheckerHater, drawoh, Sykes and others)
Regards,
Jason C. Wells