brianpaul
Mechanical
- Jan 18, 2005
- 19
The engineers in our group are having a discussion as to how to convince our tech's they need to be increasing their sand paper fineness when they prepare surfaces for installing gages. (Instead of arguing, it is some times easier to convince.)
Everything I find in the literature make your surface flat (grind if you have to), start with 220, move to 320, and on up to 400, with different sources saying when to apply surface prep.
The question naturally arose, how do we know what is smooth enough. I found literature that says a surface rms of 63-125 microinches is good for general stress analysis. A surface roughness meter didn't seem practical (or funded), so I bought a Surface Roughness Standards book to do finger scratch comparisons.
The problem starts because after applying the pneumatic grinder, the grinder pad has been flattened down and the surface appears polished. Its an uncontrolled polish, but finger scratch compares. This doesn't seem good enough, but how do you convince a tech to then begin incrementing with sand paper.
Everything I find in the literature make your surface flat (grind if you have to), start with 220, move to 320, and on up to 400, with different sources saying when to apply surface prep.
The question naturally arose, how do we know what is smooth enough. I found literature that says a surface rms of 63-125 microinches is good for general stress analysis. A surface roughness meter didn't seem practical (or funded), so I bought a Surface Roughness Standards book to do finger scratch comparisons.
The problem starts because after applying the pneumatic grinder, the grinder pad has been flattened down and the surface appears polished. Its an uncontrolled polish, but finger scratch compares. This doesn't seem good enough, but how do you convince a tech to then begin incrementing with sand paper.