Jump to content

Relationship Between Parallelism and Flatness


---
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hello everyone,

My question is, as can be seen at the example figure below, is it possible to check 0.05 parallelism when you have two planes both with 0.05 flatness tolerance? I feel like, in a situation like this, parallelism tolerance should be 2 times flatness value but I could not figure out it.

Thanks in advance.

Parallelism.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to view this quote.

If it's possible? Yes it is. Does it make sense? Absolutely not. Parallelism would make sense when its tolerance is bigger than tolerance of flatness.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Depending on the manufacturing processes it can be easy or hard to make to specification.
Technically all three dimensions could be at maximum on the same part.
In practical terms the tighter manufacturing holds the flatness the more room they have on parallelism. In the end it depends on what processes are chosen and how the part is set up.

Knowing the manufacturing process and use helps me know what measurement strategy to use.
For instance, a punched hole getting a bolt through it. 🤣
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Flatness of .05 on the datum A makes sense. But, if you must be within .05 parallelism on the other side, then you will be within .05 flatness of the other side. The .05 flatness under the .05 parallelism is unnecessary. I would just give them what they want though.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Since A is the datum , it should be LSQ. That would remove form errors from A . Flatness of A would be a separate characteristic.
Parallelism is from A (lsq) to H , including the form (Flatness) of H . At the tolerances stated, this would include flatness of H. So if the parallel characteristic of H is good then the flatness of H is by definition also satisfied. I'm sure there is room for debate, but that's the way I see it.
The flatness call out at H could be eliminated and not affect the quality of the part. IMHO
Link to comment
Share on other sites

In my opinion, for the flatness evaluation of A "Minimum" fit should be used. An "Outer Tangential" fit should be used for A as the datum for evaluating the parallelism spec.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to view this quote.

If ASME it requires Datum simulator or True geometric counterpart for Datum Feature, as Mark described O.T.E . It is customary to qualify each Datum. In the case of the Primary , flatness is limited to .050. It could be a refinement of Feature of size (rule #1) requirement as well.

The flatness of Datum H is qualified as well at .050 .

The orientation of Datum H includes only that feature form error because Datum A is a perfect geometric counterpart.

A secondary Datum could have a perpendicularity requirement to either of those. This part otherwise could be a rhombus. That is why their relationship must be limited by tolerances.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Please sign in to view this quote.

Owen, I don't think that Item 3 in this example is correct, at least in a GDT sense where parallelism includes all the form error.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The 0.05 Flatness tolerance applied to the surface with the 0.05 Parallelism tolerance is incorrect. A fundamental principal of GD&T is that Orientation controls From. So if you have an orientation tolerance, any additonal form tolerance should be a refinement. In other words, the flatness tolerance must be smaller that the parallel tolerance(The parallelism tolerance doesn't need to be 2X larger or anything like that.). From an inspector's standpoint, its just sort of redundant. If the parallelism tolerance passes, the flatness tolerance will pass necessarily.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...