cjccmc
Mechanical
- Oct 11, 2012
- 111
Hi all,
I'm the stuckee for the design of a conical shaped part and out of my league for determining suitable datums and tolerances. I attached a simplified pic that covers the main points for now. We work to 1994 ASME std and use Model Based Definition (MBD) which means means that you query the CAD model to get dimensions instead of listing them in 2D drafting style.
Main questions for now:
1) I picked the raised cone shaped surface on the outer periphery as datum A.
2) datum B is a flat surface at a skewed angle to the cone axis.
My reasoning for above is that a cone defines everything but clocking and any hole, surface, etc on part can provide the clocking. No need for a tertiary datum, you get a fixed frame of reference from cone and surface.
Are my datums and logic legit per 1994?
I'm the stuckee for the design of a conical shaped part and out of my league for determining suitable datums and tolerances. I attached a simplified pic that covers the main points for now. We work to 1994 ASME std and use Model Based Definition (MBD) which means means that you query the CAD model to get dimensions instead of listing them in 2D drafting style.
Main questions for now:
1) I picked the raised cone shaped surface on the outer periphery as datum A.
2) datum B is a flat surface at a skewed angle to the cone axis.
My reasoning for above is that a cone defines everything but clocking and any hole, surface, etc on part can provide the clocking. No need for a tertiary datum, you get a fixed frame of reference from cone and surface.
Are my datums and logic legit per 1994?