Texrat
Materials
- Feb 8, 2005
- 8
I'm having to make changes to a cylindrical part used for calibration and have issues with the current GD&T methods used. For one, datum A was palced on a centerline, which I disapprove of. For another, the current schema doesn't address critical features for manufacturing of the gauge and its ultimate use.
The rod is 211mm long, 10 mm in diameter. Each end is machined back about 14mm in length, 5mm in diameter, and then grooved at 4mm from each end to provide a place for hanging a calibrated weight. There are two 3mm dia pins (25mm long) mounted 40mm apart (basic) and centered on the rod. These pins mount the rod to a dynomometer and IMO should be datums (they are not.
I'm rusty on my GD&T and so my head is spinning at the prospect of fixing this. I know what NOT to do (the way it's now done) but can't come up with a simple, comprehensive solution. My thinking is that the only datums I need are the two mounting pins, and that all features should be WRT them, ie, using A-B in the datum space of the toelrance block.
The critical features are that if one pin is fixed (mounted) then the other is positioned in relation to it. They should be parallel and "perpendicular" to the body of the rod (one thing I'm not sure how to describe using GD&T). The grooves are critical in that as they deviate from the prescribed location, the calibration deviates as well (we are looking for torque). Straightness of the rod doesn't seem that important.
Any ideas?
The rod is 211mm long, 10 mm in diameter. Each end is machined back about 14mm in length, 5mm in diameter, and then grooved at 4mm from each end to provide a place for hanging a calibrated weight. There are two 3mm dia pins (25mm long) mounted 40mm apart (basic) and centered on the rod. These pins mount the rod to a dynomometer and IMO should be datums (they are not.
I'm rusty on my GD&T and so my head is spinning at the prospect of fixing this. I know what NOT to do (the way it's now done) but can't come up with a simple, comprehensive solution. My thinking is that the only datums I need are the two mounting pins, and that all features should be WRT them, ie, using A-B in the datum space of the toelrance block.
The critical features are that if one pin is fixed (mounted) then the other is positioned in relation to it. They should be parallel and "perpendicular" to the body of the rod (one thing I'm not sure how to describe using GD&T). The grooves are critical in that as they deviate from the prescribed location, the calibration deviates as well (we are looking for torque). Straightness of the rod doesn't seem that important.
Any ideas?