Hello,
I'm detailing some parts to send out for fabrication. A lot of the parts are shaped like plates and have symmetric features. Because of this, I tend to set up my datum reference frame using the longest surface as my A datum and my B and C datums as center-planes. I was told at my first job that if you call out a center-plane datum and put in a center-line to show this plane, you can dimension features with the symmetry implied. Follow the link for an example:
Have I been doing this correctly or do I need to include extra dimensioning to fully define the features?
Thanks,
Justin
I'm detailing some parts to send out for fabrication. A lot of the parts are shaped like plates and have symmetric features. Because of this, I tend to set up my datum reference frame using the longest surface as my A datum and my B and C datums as center-planes. I was told at my first job that if you call out a center-plane datum and put in a center-line to show this plane, you can dimension features with the symmetry implied. Follow the link for an example:
Have I been doing this correctly or do I need to include extra dimensioning to fully define the features?
Thanks,
Justin