Tmoose
Mechanical
- Apr 12, 2003
- 5,633
We are having some 8000 lb steel castings poured and machined by one Supplier/company.
There are 4 separate bolt patterns with 36 threaded holes on the part. The threaded holes are dimensioned with "basic" bolt circles and angular positions.
The threaded holes' positions are dimensioned using true position tolerances something like this -
All the above dimensions are identified as Critical Dimensions on our drawing.
The final inspection report from the Supplier said "OK" beside some of those.
When I asked for more detail they sent the rectangular CNC coordinates for the four bolt patterns, plus the hand written coordinates measured by some means.
A quick visual inspection of the hand written values shows about 18 of 36 tapped holes are not within the true position tolerance. Some by quite a bit.
Our incoming inspect QA will likely NOT be able to measure the threaded hole locations.
It has been suggested that because we cannot inspect some features ( like the threaded hole position), and will not be able to confirm the measurements at our incoming inspection, we should not reject the part.
If the hole position is too far off then four covers and components weighing from 500 to 1000 lbs will not fit on the assembly at the 11th hour, and have to be shipped to a local machine shop for emergency hole elongation or other fixes.
At a previous job there was a better equipped QA department and a sophisticated in-house manufacturing group ( routinely worked with .0001" tolerances). Manufacturing said something similar, like "if we cannot inspect it, the dimension should not be on the drawing."
Is there any basis for those "Just because WE can't measure it" arguments?
In the Eng-tips collective experience have those arguments ever been heard before ?
There are 4 separate bolt patterns with 36 threaded holes on the part. The threaded holes are dimensioned with "basic" bolt circles and angular positions.
The threaded holes' positions are dimensioned using true position tolerances something like this -
All the above dimensions are identified as Critical Dimensions on our drawing.
The final inspection report from the Supplier said "OK" beside some of those.
When I asked for more detail they sent the rectangular CNC coordinates for the four bolt patterns, plus the hand written coordinates measured by some means.
A quick visual inspection of the hand written values shows about 18 of 36 tapped holes are not within the true position tolerance. Some by quite a bit.
Our incoming inspect QA will likely NOT be able to measure the threaded hole locations.
It has been suggested that because we cannot inspect some features ( like the threaded hole position), and will not be able to confirm the measurements at our incoming inspection, we should not reject the part.
If the hole position is too far off then four covers and components weighing from 500 to 1000 lbs will not fit on the assembly at the 11th hour, and have to be shipped to a local machine shop for emergency hole elongation or other fixes.
At a previous job there was a better equipped QA department and a sophisticated in-house manufacturing group ( routinely worked with .0001" tolerances). Manufacturing said something similar, like "if we cannot inspect it, the dimension should not be on the drawing."
Is there any basis for those "Just because WE can't measure it" arguments?
In the Eng-tips collective experience have those arguments ever been heard before ?