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NutZach
Aerospace
- May 27, 2022
- 7
Good morning folks!
Long-time reader... first-time poster... ASME GDTP-2009 Senior...
Here's the question: Y14.5-2009 figure 4.3, bottom row... We see an example of how a "complex" datum feature MIGHT (in this one particular example from that figure) be able to produce a combination of theoretical datums consisting of an axis, point, and center plane... That's all well and good for a tapered / elongated symmetric feature like the one we see in that image, but... Suppose I've called out as a primary datum feature an irregular lofted complex-contoured surface? A surface that isn't tapered and therefore doesn't converge to any particular point... a surface that doesn't have a median plane... a surface that doesn't have any logical placement for a theoretical axis... I'm talking about a complex-contoured lofted surface.
What is the theoretical "datum" for this lofted surface? Is it just an infinite number of datum points? Does it even exist at all? Why wouldn't we just refer to that datum as a "mathematically-defined surface"? Or perhaps we should just skip this consideration altogether and just go straight to what the true geometric counterpart (simulator) looks like? 2009/2018 both define a datum to be "a theoretically exact point, axis, line, plane, or combination thereof derived from the theoretical datum feature simulator." It certainly seems like we really ought to be including "mathematically-defined complex-contoured surface" in that list as well.
Thoughts?
Long-time reader... first-time poster... ASME GDTP-2009 Senior...
Here's the question: Y14.5-2009 figure 4.3, bottom row... We see an example of how a "complex" datum feature MIGHT (in this one particular example from that figure) be able to produce a combination of theoretical datums consisting of an axis, point, and center plane... That's all well and good for a tapered / elongated symmetric feature like the one we see in that image, but... Suppose I've called out as a primary datum feature an irregular lofted complex-contoured surface? A surface that isn't tapered and therefore doesn't converge to any particular point... a surface that doesn't have a median plane... a surface that doesn't have any logical placement for a theoretical axis... I'm talking about a complex-contoured lofted surface.
What is the theoretical "datum" for this lofted surface? Is it just an infinite number of datum points? Does it even exist at all? Why wouldn't we just refer to that datum as a "mathematically-defined surface"? Or perhaps we should just skip this consideration altogether and just go straight to what the true geometric counterpart (simulator) looks like? 2009/2018 both define a datum to be "a theoretically exact point, axis, line, plane, or combination thereof derived from the theoretical datum feature simulator." It certainly seems like we really ought to be including "mathematically-defined complex-contoured surface" in that list as well.
Thoughts?