201181
Mechanical
- Apr 13, 2006
- 49
Hi,
Firstly, apologies for the bad drawing enclosed (CAD system is currently down)...
Anyway, I was just thinking about something I came across when working at my previous company (a large global leader in fluid control), and would love anothers opinion. Part of my job was to apply GPS to 2D drawings, and this is something I have a few years experience with. One thing I seen at this particular company, which I had never seen before was using a concentricity tolerance, which also referenced a perpendicular, planar face. I have drawn a very basic example of what I typically saw on some drawings, and I was just curious, has anyone ever seen this before?
My understanding is that coaxiality references an axis and concentricity references a point, where only the corresponding axis (or combined axis to make a common axis reference such as A-B) or point is the reference for the tolerance frame. I understand it is normal to add a concentricity tolerance to one diameter axis, which references another diameters axis (for example, a diameters axis referencing datum A as per my sketch), so I thought it was strange to also reference a planar face (datum B on my sketch), which is at 90 degrees to the A axis. I cannot find any examples of this anywhere else (web and reference books).
Please look at the sketch and tell me what you think, as I would love to know if anyone else has seen this (perhaps I could learn something).
Many thanks in advance
Firstly, apologies for the bad drawing enclosed (CAD system is currently down)...
Anyway, I was just thinking about something I came across when working at my previous company (a large global leader in fluid control), and would love anothers opinion. Part of my job was to apply GPS to 2D drawings, and this is something I have a few years experience with. One thing I seen at this particular company, which I had never seen before was using a concentricity tolerance, which also referenced a perpendicular, planar face. I have drawn a very basic example of what I typically saw on some drawings, and I was just curious, has anyone ever seen this before?
My understanding is that coaxiality references an axis and concentricity references a point, where only the corresponding axis (or combined axis to make a common axis reference such as A-B) or point is the reference for the tolerance frame. I understand it is normal to add a concentricity tolerance to one diameter axis, which references another diameters axis (for example, a diameters axis referencing datum A as per my sketch), so I thought it was strange to also reference a planar face (datum B on my sketch), which is at 90 degrees to the A axis. I cannot find any examples of this anywhere else (web and reference books).
Please look at the sketch and tell me what you think, as I would love to know if anyone else has seen this (perhaps I could learn something).
Many thanks in advance