sooner1031
Mechanical
- Mar 24, 2015
- 2
Quick scenario, followed by a question:
A vendor fabricates a large circular panel. It is comprised of two thin aluminum face sheets bonded to aluminum honeycomb core in between. Holes were drilled in this panel, located with positional tolerances. The thickness dimension on the panel is 0.80", +-.1". No explicit flatness is defined. The fabricated part is warped (by a half inch in some places!).
Given that a drawing note indicates to interpret the drawing per ASME Y14.5M-2009;
I realize that there *should* have been an explicit flatness callout on the drawing to avoid confusion, but unfortunately that's water under the bridge at this point.
A vendor fabricates a large circular panel. It is comprised of two thin aluminum face sheets bonded to aluminum honeycomb core in between. Holes were drilled in this panel, located with positional tolerances. The thickness dimension on the panel is 0.80", +-.1". No explicit flatness is defined. The fabricated part is warped (by a half inch in some places!).
Given that a drawing note indicates to interpret the drawing per ASME Y14.5M-2009;
Does Rule #1 apply to the thickness dimension of this panel (i.e. implied flatness of .2" if the part is built to the nominal dimension)?
Or, does the "stock item" argument hold any water here, thereby nullifying Rule #1? The face sheets were called out as .020" 2024-T3C aluminum, and the data sheet for the aluminum core only mentions a thickness tolerance of +-.006".
I realize that there *should* have been an explicit flatness callout on the drawing to avoid confusion, but unfortunately that's water under the bridge at this point.