securitech
Mechanical
Here is my situation:
We have a part that we would like to have machined by a local fab shop or our overeas plant. These sources can produce large quantities of the basic machined parts at a significantly lower cost than our in house machine shop. However, the secondary operations drastically increase the price of the part, so it would be more cost effective to do the secondaries in-house. So we need one drawing that shows the basic machining sizes and one that gives the finished part.
Here is my question:
Is there a standard in existance that defines how the drawings should be organized? For example, should we have two drawings with distinct part numbers that reference each other or should it be one package with multiple pages (Page 1 - Basic Machining or Casting, Page 2 Secondary Operations)?
If there is no standard in existance, what is the recommended approach.
I have done my research and was not able to find anything "conrete". Your help would be much appreciated.
Adam Vega
Securitech Group, INC
We have a part that we would like to have machined by a local fab shop or our overeas plant. These sources can produce large quantities of the basic machined parts at a significantly lower cost than our in house machine shop. However, the secondary operations drastically increase the price of the part, so it would be more cost effective to do the secondaries in-house. So we need one drawing that shows the basic machining sizes and one that gives the finished part.
Here is my question:
Is there a standard in existance that defines how the drawings should be organized? For example, should we have two drawings with distinct part numbers that reference each other or should it be one package with multiple pages (Page 1 - Basic Machining or Casting, Page 2 Secondary Operations)?
If there is no standard in existance, what is the recommended approach.
I have done my research and was not able to find anything "conrete". Your help would be much appreciated.
Adam Vega
Securitech Group, INC