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【转帖】standard tolerance9in the title block0 a comparsion from mm
standard tolerance(in the title block) a comparsion from mm
i work in an environment where we use metric units and english dimensions on different drawings. we use the english dimensions on the tooling drawings (vises, cutters, etc). then we use metric dimensions for the actual product we manufacture with the tooling. so to my question. do the standard tolerances in the title block have to be the same, from metric units to english units? here is what we have now english .xx +/- .03 .xxx +/- .010 .xxxx +/- .0020 angle +/- 1 metric .x +/- .6 .xx +/- .20 .xxx +/- .030 angle +/- 2 from my past understanding, these have to be the same value from one another, same decimal places, everything. what do you all think? thank you check out our whitepaper library. why would they be the same. your tooling tolerances can (and probablly will) be different than your product definition tolerances. wes c. ------------------------------ light travels faster than sound. that's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak. what is the standard that you are applying for your dimensioning and tolerancing? would that not answer the question for you? you have a conflict with the standard for metric dimensioning that says no trailing zeros on metric values. metric .x +/- .6 .xx +/- .2 .xxx +/- .03 angle +/- 2 "wildfires are dangerous, hard to control, and economically catastrophic." ben loosli sr is technologist l-3 communications what you show is acceptable. as ben described, remove the trailing zeros. chris systems analyst, i.s. solidworks 06 4.1/pdmworks 06 autocad 06 why did your angle tolerance change? are you dimensioning in grads? fastasleep, good catch! i didn't look close enough. angle should be the same, unless you specify the difference. chris systems analyst, i.s. solidworks 06 4.1/pdmworks 06 autocad 06 regarding the angular tolerance again, i want to point out that the op stated that the two different unit systems are for entirely different products (metric for product, us customary for tooling). each product may have a different set of "standard" tolerances as defined by the manufaturing/engineering/inspection requrements. i just don't see this as an issue whatsoever. wes c. ------------------------------ light travels faster than sound. that's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak. ok so i guess i kind of answered my own question(i just needed some to actully tell it to me). the metric units is for the product and the english is for the tooling. so who cares if the tolerances are different because we would never chris-cross the two (ex: i would never dimension tooling in metric units at this job). so i wont change a thing. thank you humanbone, you should follow ben's advice regarding the trailing zero's though. wes c. ------------------------------ light travels faster than sound. that's why some people appear bright until you hear them speak. yeah, that was a mistake i made when i was writing the thread itself. we dont have trailing zeros |
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