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#1
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pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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#2
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
Check your drawing settings. They look like they're on ISO. You want ANSI. Your drawing will immediately become more readable.
You have no title block tolerances. Without them, the shop has no info as to what tolerances you expect them to hold. It also doesn't matter for this part, but the first/third angle projection callout that is normally in the title box is important. Having the wrong one can completely reverse your design intent and result in the "wrong" part being made, with a non-2D part. Right now your drawing is probably using first angle, because ISO. ANSI uses third angle. In general I would dimension things with multiple copies (holes, a pattern distance, etc) as "_X" as opposed to writing "each", or "all bottom holes". On your radius/angle callouts, the quantity should precede the measurement. I wouldn't dimension all the lengths of the flats in the pockets. What I would do is pick an origin (a corner, usually, but the bearing bore in the center of the part could work too) and dimension from there to the flats. That way you have fully defined where the features are located and if desired they can figure out the flat lengths from that info. Do your best to avoid having dimensions placed on top of the part itself. It's much cleaner if you can. You don't appear to have a material listed Do you really want slip fits for your bearings? That's fine if you do, but even with title block tolerances in place you probably want to tolerance those holes directly. Our title block tolerances are +/- .005 for a three place decimal...you definitely would not be happy if you want that to be a nice sliding fit and it comes back at 1.121 or 1.131. If I were making a drawing for this, I might make 2 sheets to optimize readability. One would have dimensions for all holes/bores and the other would have dimensions for all the pockets and the exterior of the part. This isn't necessary as long as you can fit everything and still easily figure out what's going on. Your pattern of holes on the bottom doesn't appear to have a dimension locating it vertically. Your (4) 1/4" clearance holes aren't located at all. I'm having a hard time figuring out what's going on exactly with the dimensions locating the bores (because the ISO format sucks, with all the intersecting lines and stuff), but they should really also be dimensioned from a common origin and not feature to feature. There's nothing wrong with having the second view on that sheet, but you could eliminate it if you wanted to, by dimensioning the height of the plate directly and adding a note that it be made from .250 plate. |
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#3
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
The dimensions are a mess.
I'd recommend trying to move dimensions outside the border of the part whenever you can. Just doing that will make it far more readable. If you're sending this to a sponsor / vendor, consider whether you really need accuracy to the thousandth on ALL of those dimensions. (You don't.) Since you're dimensioning to witnesses, you should show the witness marks to make that clear. |
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#4
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
Thanks, that's a ton of great suggestions. A couple questions:
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Last edited by Monochron : 15-11-2015 at 20:02. |
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#5
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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Tolerances will depend on the desired end result, the material, etc. For any sort of decorative feature (lightening holes included), you probably don't need to go more than two decimal places. The title block tolerance specifies a default tolerance for dimensions that don't call them out explicitly. Last edited by Madison : 15-11-2015 at 20:58. |
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#6
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
How are you planning on machining this? You may not need to dimension a significant portion of it if a sponsor is just lasering the thing anyway and has tolerance numbers for you.
We sometimes skip drawings for things sent to the local community college to CNC or to a sheet metal shop. |
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#7
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
Would ordinate dimensions be good for this part? I usually use the ordinate system for my parts.
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#8
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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I took a second pass and addressed as many comments as I could, uploaded here. Hopefully it is a lot more readable and missing less important info ![]() Last edited by Monochron : 16-11-2015 at 00:35. |
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#9
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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You also may want to move things to 2 decimal places wherver you don't need the precision of 3. EDIT: Especially the odd pocket on the left; that would be extremely time-consuming to do on a manual mill. |
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#10
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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Your new drawing looks a lot better. Could probably use some more refinement, but in echo the sentiment that this would be an absolute nightmare to make on a manual mil. Have you shown the sponsor the general idea of whaf you want done? Or will this drawing be the first time they've seen it? The amount of work required to make all the external radii and non orthogonal cuts makes this part virtually impossible to make without expending a MASSIVE amount of time. You're looking at numerous setups on a rotary table to produce all the internal radially arrayed pockets and the external radii. The angled linear cuts on the two left lightening pockets both require complicated setups to make that a single axis move. If I was a machinist and got handed this print and was expected to make it, I'd be cursing the engineer that came up with it... And then I'd quit. Any non rectangular features on a part are too much to ask of someone with a manual mill, for FRC purposes. Your sponsor will thank you if you can simplify the part for them. [edit] second the comment by asid61 to do the external contours on a bandsaw and sander. If you need the weight loss from the internal pockets, you could omit them from the print and print out a 1:1 drawing, glue it to the part after machining, drill some pilot holes in the pockets, and carefully jigsaw them out. Last edited by Cory : 16-11-2015 at 00:49. |
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#11
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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#12
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Re: pic: TerrorBytes 2015 Shooter Plate (Drawing)
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You're probably going to be better off doing the spines out of a material that can be bent/rolled precisely, taking care of the radius that way, and then drilling the holes. Or you could rough-cut it with a saw and sand/grind it down, as suggested previously. Use the mill for hole-drilling only (and if it's just that, there's a drill press wanting some attention, I'd assume). |
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