stephannelle
Aerospace
- Nov 10, 2014
- 4
Hello all,
I've been in a debate with a tooling inspector and the quality director at my company (gen aviation oem) about inspecting flat pattern parts to Mylar vs paper. For many years here all the drawings were printed on Mylar and it was policy to inspect undimensioned flat patterns to Mylar as opposed to plain paper due to its dimensional stability and robustness. We no longer have the correct style printer to print on Mylar (separate issue.) I made the argument that for a flat pattern part less than 24"x24" the difference in true drawing scale Mylar vs plain paper would be an almost immeasurable difference, and certainly immeasurable with the eye and a steel scale and even calipers. They are worried that the paper is going to grow/shrink in the non climate controlled shop by such an amount so as to cause problems during inspection. I've found thermal expansion values for Mylar but not for plain paper. Does anyone have thermal expansion rates for plain/computer paper? Has anyone dealt with this issue before? I would like to show them numbers that prove that for "x" sized drawing, a temporary paper copy is acceptable to inspect to.
Thanks,
Stephan
I've been in a debate with a tooling inspector and the quality director at my company (gen aviation oem) about inspecting flat pattern parts to Mylar vs paper. For many years here all the drawings were printed on Mylar and it was policy to inspect undimensioned flat patterns to Mylar as opposed to plain paper due to its dimensional stability and robustness. We no longer have the correct style printer to print on Mylar (separate issue.) I made the argument that for a flat pattern part less than 24"x24" the difference in true drawing scale Mylar vs plain paper would be an almost immeasurable difference, and certainly immeasurable with the eye and a steel scale and even calipers. They are worried that the paper is going to grow/shrink in the non climate controlled shop by such an amount so as to cause problems during inspection. I've found thermal expansion values for Mylar but not for plain paper. Does anyone have thermal expansion rates for plain/computer paper? Has anyone dealt with this issue before? I would like to show them numbers that prove that for "x" sized drawing, a temporary paper copy is acceptable to inspect to.
Thanks,
Stephan