HvdL
Industrial
- Aug 8, 2011
- 4
Dear all,
at my company we are trying to add tolerances on certain envelope dimensions of sheet metal weldment parts to make sure the parts will cause no issues in assembly. (Procurement can switch suppliers as they see fit.)
For your information:
We have drawings for the sheetmetal sub components, completely dimensioned and toleranced and also ISO9013 is call out for the laser cutting.
And weldment drawings showing how to position and weld the reinforcement plates and paint the weldment.
We thought of adding ISO 2768-xx on the weldment drawings. But we think a sub contractor can say with reason that ISO2768 is not meant for weldments, and therefore is not accepted.
For weldments there's ISO 13920, but those tolerances are extremely wide for our kind of product. It serves no purpose putting that on drawing.
2 questions;
Is there another standard for weldments with tight(er) tolerances?
Can you advice another method or should we add ISO 2768 anyway?
Best regards,
Hans.
at my company we are trying to add tolerances on certain envelope dimensions of sheet metal weldment parts to make sure the parts will cause no issues in assembly. (Procurement can switch suppliers as they see fit.)
For your information:
We have drawings for the sheetmetal sub components, completely dimensioned and toleranced and also ISO9013 is call out for the laser cutting.
And weldment drawings showing how to position and weld the reinforcement plates and paint the weldment.
We thought of adding ISO 2768-xx on the weldment drawings. But we think a sub contractor can say with reason that ISO2768 is not meant for weldments, and therefore is not accepted.
For weldments there's ISO 13920, but those tolerances are extremely wide for our kind of product. It serves no purpose putting that on drawing.
2 questions;
Is there another standard for weldments with tight(er) tolerances?
Can you advice another method or should we add ISO 2768 anyway?
Best regards,
Hans.