Geometric Tolerancing

2,736 views 9 slides Feb 19, 2010
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About This Presentation

Geometric tolerancing is a method which is widely used in industry when the more basic systems of tolerancing component features does not provide the required accuracy.

The system of geometric tolerancing id detailed together with the particular features of the system.


Slide Content

Geometric Tolerancing Design for Manufacture Geometric tolerancing Agreed by ISO 1001 included in BS308 (drawing standard) Author: Leicester College Date created: Date revised: 2009 Abstract: Geometric tolerancing is a method which is widely used in industry when the more basic systems of tolerancing component features does not provide the required accuracy. The system of geometric tolerancing id detailed together with the particular features of the system. © Leicester College 2009. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License .

These files support the Edexcel HN unit – Design for Manufacture (NQF L4) File Name Unit Outcome Key Words Design for assembly 1.1, 1.2,1.4 Overview, Cost, quality, reliability, assembly, guidelines FMS 2.2 Models, work cycles, volume, machine utilisation, automation, flexible, systems Geometric Tolerancing 3.1,3.2 Geometric, tolerance, system, symbols, orientation, BS, ISO, location, runout , datum Industrial Robots 2.2,2.3 Robot, industrial, robot arm, Cartesian, polar, cylindrical, jointed arm Jigs and Fixtures 2.1,2.3 Efficiency, production, jigs, fixtures, tooling, production, Kinematics 2.1,2.3 Machines, kinematics, Degrees of freedom, configuration, space, work space, robot, joints, forward, inverse For further information regarding unit outcomes go to Edexcel.org.uk/ HN/ Engineering / Specifications Geometric Tolerancing

Geometric Tolerancing Purpose – Geometric tolerance symbols give precise indication of GEOMETRIC requirement for a given feature / drawing Symbols universally understood Used when normal dimensioning and tolerancing are not sufficient for requirements of component / operation

Geometric Tolerancing Only use geometric tolerancing if it is absolutely necessary to the required design function It adds to the cost of both manufacture and inspection

Geometric Tolerancing The symbols used represent a range of potential geometric features of a form of feature Four types Form Orientation Location Runout

Geometric Tolerancing Symbol construction Description Toleranced feature indications direct By letter Datum indications Direct By letter Datum targets Theoretically exact dimension Projected tolerance zone Max. Metal condition

Geometric Tolerancing Tolerance frame This type of frame used when no datum is required This type of frame used when a datum is specified – mandatory for some geometric features Feature symbol Tolerance Feature symbol tolerance datum

Geometric Tolerancing DATUMS A datum may be a plane surface or axis. For practical purposes the plane surface or axis is used for manufacture or inspection If the toleranced feature is related to a datum, this is shown by a datum letter which is indicated in the tolerance frame by a capital letter

Geometric Tolerancing This resource was created Leicester College and released as an open educational resource through the Open Engineering Resources project of the Higher Education Academy Engineering Subject Centre. The Open Engineering Resources project was funded by HEFCE and part of the JISC/HE Academy UKOER programme. © 2009 Leicester College This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License. The JISC logo is licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales Licence. All reproductions must comply with the terms of that licence. The HEA logo is owned by the Higher Education Academy Limited may be freely distributed and copied for educational purposes only, provided that appropriate acknowledgement is given to the Higher Education Academy as the copyright holder and original publisher. The Leicester College name and logo is owned by the College and should not be produced without the express permission of the College.