JonnyK
Mechanical
- Jul 28, 2004
- 15
Hello,
The mechanical drawings that my company generates are in standard units (inches) and typically to the one-thousandths place (i.e. .001).
However, we have some drawings that require (for European customers) that dimensions be called out in both inches and millimeter.
Standard practice is to call out the millimeters to the one-hundredths place.
So a length of 4.125” would be dimensioned as “104.78 [4.125]”.
Does this make sense to have the SI units with five significant digits while the Standard Units only have four significant digits?
The conversion is being done by the CAD system so maybe significant figures are unimportant, and it is usually clear what the drawing dimensions imply.
I was just wondering how other people have/would address this issue. Or maybe it is not an issue and just anal-retentiveness.
Any feedback would be appreciated.
TIA
The mechanical drawings that my company generates are in standard units (inches) and typically to the one-thousandths place (i.e. .001).
However, we have some drawings that require (for European customers) that dimensions be called out in both inches and millimeter.
Standard practice is to call out the millimeters to the one-hundredths place.
So a length of 4.125” would be dimensioned as “104.78 [4.125]”.
Does this make sense to have the SI units with five significant digits while the Standard Units only have four significant digits?
The conversion is being done by the CAD system so maybe significant figures are unimportant, and it is usually clear what the drawing dimensions imply.
I was just wondering how other people have/would address this issue. Or maybe it is not an issue and just anal-retentiveness.
Any feedback would be appreciated.
TIA