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Bye, bye, ISO dinosaur


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  • 1 month later...
Yes, and it contains no more standardized tolerance tables - meaning that every designer will come up with his/her own personal tolerance specs. Which also means that when we read the dimensions for an inspection report from a CAD drawing in our CAQ system, we can no longer let it insert the general tolerances automatically from a pre-defined tolerance table (it can't extract custom tables from the drawing). We will have to enter all of them by hand, one by one, which is a lot more work.
Sometimes I think all the standardization committees somehow took a wrong turn some years ago. These guys can't be working in real companies. 😕

Well, thank you ISO!
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  • 1 month later...
I don't understand why this new standard replaces only the second part of ISO 2768 and not the first one, as in the title includes the term "general size specifications", which was covered by ISO 2768-1 (1989).
Do you know why?
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