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Dimensioning and Tolerancing. Tolerancing. No manufacturing process can produce parts with exact dimensions Allowable variations or tolerances must be specified by the designer, with two objectives: ensure fit and function minimize manufacturing cost. Example - shaft in hole fit.
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Tolerancing • No manufacturing process can produce parts with exact dimensions • Allowable variations or tolerances must be specified by the designer, with two objectives: • ensure fit and function • minimize manufacturing cost
Example - shaft in hole fit • Shaft in hole fits are very common • Both shaft and hole diameter vary • Dimensions and tolerances must be specified to guarantee the desired fit
Tolerance Minimum clearance Shaft in Hole
Types of Fit • Clearance fit • largest shaft diameter is smaller than smallest hole diameter • there is always clearance • Interference • smallest shaft diameter is larger than largest hole diameter • there is always interference • Transition • there could be either interference or clearance
Clearance Fits • Loose running • lots of play, where accuracy is not important • Free running • less play, good for moving parts • Close running • close fit for moving parts, high accuracy required
Transition Fits • Used to accurately locate parts during assembly • Tradeoff between ease of assembly/disassembly and accuracy of location • Example: locating dowels or pins
Interference Fits • Used for force or press fits • Results in permanent assembly without need for fasteners or other joining operations • High locational accuracy
Multiple holes and shafts • Often parts are assembled with multiple shafts mating with multiple holes • Examples?
Objectives • Close fit with no play and good locational accuracy • High probability of parts fitting despite variations in dimensions
Types of Variations • Size tolerances on hole diameters • Size tolerances on shaft diameters • Positional tolerances on hole locations
Must Fit in Worst Case • Holes at minimum size • Shafts (e.g. bolts) at maximum size • Holes at minimum distance on one part • Holes at maximum distance on the other part
Maximum Smallest hole Minimum Largest shaft Worst Case
Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerancing (GD&T) • GD&T symbols specify additional tolerancing information for 3D geometry • Used in addition to standard +/- dimensioning • Used properly, GD&T can allow looser tolerances to minimize manufacturing cost
Datums • A datum is a plane, centerline or point used as a reference starting point for dimensions • Often flat faces of a part or centerlines of holes are used as datums • There can be several datums, labeled A, B, C, etc.
Maximum Material Condition (MMC) • MMC is the condition where a feature has the maximum volume or material • For a hole, it is the smallest size • For a shaft, it is the largest size
Departure from MMC • As a feature departs from MMC, it moves away from the worst case • This may permit tolerances on other dimensions to be increased while still achieving fit • For example, if the holes in the previous example are larger than the minimum, the tolerance on the spacing can be increased and the parts will still fit
Geometric Controls • Form controls • compare feature to ideal geometry • Orientation controls • compare orientation of features to datums • Location controls • compare location to datums
Form Controls • Straightness • compares a line or axis to a perfectly straight line • Circularity • compares a circular cross section to a perfect circle • Flatness • compares a flat surface to a perfect plane • Cylindricity • compares a cylindrical feature to a perfect cylinder • includes axis straightness, circularity and taper
Orientation Controls • Parallelism • a line or surface must be parallel to a datum • Perpendicularity • a line or surface must be perpendicular to a datum • Angularity • a line or surface must be at an angle to a datum • Line profile and Surface profile • line and surface profiles compare features to ideal profiles
Location Controls • Concentricity • controls deviation of concentric axes of cylindrical elements • Runout • measures “wobble” in surface of cylindrical feature as it is rotated about an axis • Position • Locates features relative to datums • allows larger “bonus” tolerances as features depart from MMC
Feature Control Frames • GD&T controls are added to drawings as feature control frames, using standard symbols • In I-DEAS, they are defined by completing a form
Tolerancing in I-DEAS • Tolerances can be applied to constraints • I-DEAS tolerance analysis uses variational geometry to analyze the effect of tolerance stack-up • GD&T symbols can be applied as annotations in modelling mode • Annotations are automatically included in drawings