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Symbol: A circle with a horizontal line bisecting it

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bogiedreamer

Mechanical
Apr 14, 2005
57
It appears on a customer drawing and I don't know what it means.
thanks for helping,
Bogiedreamer
 
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In what context is it used?
I can think of a diameter symbol, but the line should be at an angle.
Or a seam weld, but it should have double horiz lines.

Chris
Sr. Mechanical Designer, CAD
SolidWorks 05 SP2.0 / PDMWorks 05
ctopher's home site
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that could be a symbol for a specific datum (might be for machining purpose).
the upper half usually shows dia.X , which denote a datum stopper (a pin in this case) of X in diameter.
And the lower half denote the datum axis, eg. Y2, datum point 2 of Y-axis.

Best regards,
ct
 
This symbol is used for the diameter, length and cross-section of a plastic ring.

Chris,
The diameter symbol has the bisecting line at 45* but this line is horizontal.

Ct,
That is what I am thinking. But the top and bottom halves are left blank.
 
What drawing specification is called out on the print (e.g. ANSI/ASME Y14.5, or ???)
 
At a previous employer, we had some old drawings that showed the "single butt weld", which was a single line across the weld symbol instead of two. In other words, maybe it's a mistake.
 
bogiedreamer,

If your bisected circle has an arrow or line pointing at something, it is either a datum target, or an assembly item number.

A datum target will have a letter and number in the lower half, such as A1, A2, A3, B1, B2... The top half of the circle might contain a diameter specification. You will have to read a GD&T reference like ASME Y14.5M-1994. I would not want to have to explain this in text. We do have a GD&T forum.

On assembly drawings, some people want to include the part quantity as well as the item number. The top number is an item number corresponding to a line on a BOM. The bottom number is the quantity of parts required. This is supported by CAD software like SolidWorks. I do not know what drafting standard calls this up.

If it does not conform to either of the above descriptions, then it is something else, and hopefully, someone else can help you.

JHG
 
I use it for the outer diameter symbol, I don't like using "R" for radius on the prints unless necessary. (personal habit, machinists can directly measure a diameter rather than radius quicker on the lathe.)

Judging from other responses, equally valid, your interpretation probably depends on the context of the print.

Kenneth J Hueston, PEng
Principal
Sturni-Hueston Engineering Inc
Edmonton, Alberta Canada
 
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