breyman
Bioengineer
- Dec 8, 2010
- 2
Hi,
We have debate going on in our company right now as to the true defintion of a simple tolerance.
Here's the very simple question:
Say you had a rod with a diameter dimension and tolerance of 1.000" +/- 0.005", what is the exact upper bound that that part can be and still satisfy this tolerance?
One group says that the part can be no larger than exactly 1.005", meaning that if it was actually 1.00500000001" (assuming you could measure to this accuracy), it is out of spec.
The other group says that as long as the first 4 digits aren't more then 1.005", than it is okay, i.e. 1.00599999999" would be "in spec"
I'm personally on the side of the first group and this has been my understanding all along, but there's oddly enough support/debate that I'm confused now. What are your thoughts?
We have debate going on in our company right now as to the true defintion of a simple tolerance.
Here's the very simple question:
Say you had a rod with a diameter dimension and tolerance of 1.000" +/- 0.005", what is the exact upper bound that that part can be and still satisfy this tolerance?
One group says that the part can be no larger than exactly 1.005", meaning that if it was actually 1.00500000001" (assuming you could measure to this accuracy), it is out of spec.
The other group says that as long as the first 4 digits aren't more then 1.005", than it is okay, i.e. 1.00599999999" would be "in spec"
I'm personally on the side of the first group and this has been my understanding all along, but there's oddly enough support/debate that I'm confused now. What are your thoughts?