BIG_SHAFE
Mechanical
- Feb 1, 2019
- 4
Hi,
I'm looking for some input on how others specify and interpret material call out's.
For example, when a drawing/BOM calls out a material, something like "STEEL BAR ASTM A108", I don't know how to interpret it. I'm trying to place myself in the fab house/vendor's shoes as being given that information, looking at the ASTM spec, and then trying to select a material to order. In the A108 spec, I don't see a default material when not specified, like in some other specs. There are a plethora of materials and then it can be further compounded with heat treatments.
My designer, who has decades more experience than me, is also doing this with some of his material call out's. When I look through some of the spec's I can't figure out what someone would order/use if its not specified. Does this just mean anything in the spec is fair game?
I'm doing an engineering analysis/check of the designs and when evaluating loads/stresses on certain parts, I find strengths greatly varying in the spec. I would prefer to call out something rather than leave it open, but I'm not looking to add a ton of work for him to do or cost unnecessarily. Especially if I'm missing something.
Also, for materials that have trade names like Delrin, Inconel, etc. do you typically just call out the trade name that usually has a spec associated with it or both the spec and the trade name? In the case of Delrin, the ASTM only has alpha-numeric designations and doesn't recognize the name. Delrin does have an associated alpha-numberic designation from what I could find from the manufacturer's information. So I'm proposing either calling out the trade name or the alpha-numeric designation with ASTM spec, thoughts?
Just looking to see if I'm really missing something or this line of thinking is right. In previous employers we used the same 3-5 materials (automotive), so this wasn't an issue. My current employer does much different type of work (build to print) that seems to cover vast material types across multiple standards (ASME, ASTM, SAE, etc.). So this is some unfamiliar territory for me.
Thanks.
I'm looking for some input on how others specify and interpret material call out's.
For example, when a drawing/BOM calls out a material, something like "STEEL BAR ASTM A108", I don't know how to interpret it. I'm trying to place myself in the fab house/vendor's shoes as being given that information, looking at the ASTM spec, and then trying to select a material to order. In the A108 spec, I don't see a default material when not specified, like in some other specs. There are a plethora of materials and then it can be further compounded with heat treatments.
My designer, who has decades more experience than me, is also doing this with some of his material call out's. When I look through some of the spec's I can't figure out what someone would order/use if its not specified. Does this just mean anything in the spec is fair game?
I'm doing an engineering analysis/check of the designs and when evaluating loads/stresses on certain parts, I find strengths greatly varying in the spec. I would prefer to call out something rather than leave it open, but I'm not looking to add a ton of work for him to do or cost unnecessarily. Especially if I'm missing something.
Also, for materials that have trade names like Delrin, Inconel, etc. do you typically just call out the trade name that usually has a spec associated with it or both the spec and the trade name? In the case of Delrin, the ASTM only has alpha-numeric designations and doesn't recognize the name. Delrin does have an associated alpha-numberic designation from what I could find from the manufacturer's information. So I'm proposing either calling out the trade name or the alpha-numeric designation with ASTM spec, thoughts?
Just looking to see if I'm really missing something or this line of thinking is right. In previous employers we used the same 3-5 materials (automotive), so this wasn't an issue. My current employer does much different type of work (build to print) that seems to cover vast material types across multiple standards (ASME, ASTM, SAE, etc.). So this is some unfamiliar territory for me.
Thanks.