GD&T Choosing Datums II

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  • čas přidán 10. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 40

  • @zachmyren160
    @zachmyren160 Před 2 lety +11

    Thank you so much Dean. Teaching with your large, printed model, and the example you used in part 1 has helped me tremendously. I really appreciate you.

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety +1

      Great to hear! Thanks for taking the time to leave a comment.

  • @QwertyCanada
    @QwertyCanada Před 2 lety +6

    #1 GD&T content creator on CZcams at the moment.

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks so much! I really appreciate all your comments and questions.

  • @kevlar_87
    @kevlar_87 Před 2 lety +7

    Great 😃👍 video, excellent example of real world assembly for the students to learn from. I really enjoy your videos, thanks for taking the time and teaching us your knowledge.

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety +1

      Thanks so much! I feel like there is very little printed or online information on this topic, I am working on more videos to address the design process.

  • @JF-bc2lw
    @JF-bc2lw Před 10 měsíci +1

    Im a first year product engineer and your videos are helping so much.

  • @jon-williammurphy9780
    @jon-williammurphy9780 Před 7 měsíci

    First off, I absolutely love your videos. I am a mechanical design engineer with ~8 years work experience in consumer products, but having always worked with Asian suppliers, I never really learned GD&T. I am working in automotive now and your videos are the best I've seen for understanding the theory of GD&T.
    Let's see, I'll do my best here. For the custom Thumb screw I would make the running surface as Datum A and keep Datum B the same, but that's just because I don't know enough to make a thread as a Datum. To me that would just be easier to inspect.
    Then for the Red Part I would say you do favor one side over the other in that the thumb screw squishes one face into the inside of the Yellow Part, so that should be your primary datum. Then maybe the hole for the custom shoulder screw should be the second datum since it's critical that the hole on the other side is concentric with that (maybe change the design so that it's a thru hole that gets tapped on both sides to ensure that that is the case). Then the last datum can be the surface you selected as A, it would be just one point that stops the rotation.
    From a design perspective one issue I see with this is that you're constraining the micrometer with the end of the thumb screw, which is a small circular surface and is liable to allow the mic to rotate. I think there's a way to keep the same number of parts but make it clamp like the mic holder you showed at the beginning.

  • @nothingbutengineering
    @nothingbutengineering Před 2 měsíci

    I have comment about the datums on red part. Based on its fit and function, we could use one of the side surfaces as datum A and control the perpendicularity of threaded holes and the parallelism of the opposing sliding surface within 0.5 or something (I'm metric btw). Datum B can be largest surface with a generous profile tolerance. Datum C could be the top surface to control the orientation of the threaded holes back to all three datums. Although datum C is mating to air, as its controlling the orientation of the hole - it should have profile of 1 for proper hole alignment.

  • @paulbaird1351
    @paulbaird1351 Před 2 lety +1

    Dean, this should be the series intro. It is incredibility enlightening for sapcial learners, and I would argue any type of learner. The video stands on it's own, but if it existed in an edit form with intro level imagery tie-ins and concept phrases it would be a smash. Text book in a minute if you ask me. Might as well download the concepts.

  • @Notkdenben
    @Notkdenben Před 2 lety +1

    I’m getting a lot of good information out of these videos, thanks!

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety

      Super great to hear! Thanks so much.

  • @DEFE1994
    @DEFE1994 Před 2 lety +1

    So happy I discovered your channel, great content :)

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety

      Super cool to hear! There should be plenty of content to peruse.

  • @mighty_monkey_7347
    @mighty_monkey_7347 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you very much for this example. Do you have a presentation similar to this for using alignment pins on two mating components. Thank you for the GREAT WORK !

  • @ariel59864470
    @ariel59864470 Před rokem +1

    💯 Excellent teacher 💯

  • @Ashnek34
    @Ashnek34 Před rokem

    This was very helpful, thank you for your time and effort.

  • @BestiaDuff
    @BestiaDuff Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks for the video. Question, how do design a checking fixture using the two holes as you B datum?

  • @MiloJDel
    @MiloJDel Před rokem +1

    Hi Dean, great video
    I've always avoided using threaded holes as datums due to the difficulty of picking up on them with a CMM, and unfortunately this has often sacrificed the functionality of my GD&T
    Do you have any videos on using threaded features as datums and inspection for threaded feature positions?

  • @kylershook
    @kylershook Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks Dean!
    Question about thru-holes with counterbores (or csinks).
    When you select a thru-hole and cbore pattern (or even a single instance) as a datum, how would an inspector build out the Datum Reference Frame for it since they are two different/separate features?

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety

      Hi, Great question without an easy answer. Let me think about the long answer a little bit. The short answer is that the inspector will likely take the diameter with the most surface area and base the datum axis on that feature, probably the hole instead of the counterbore. If you have an example, feel free to email it to me and I can take a look.

  • @gianpaolobrignolo5749
    @gianpaolobrignolo5749 Před 2 lety +1

    Thanks a lot for your videos! Very well done! I have a question: on the drawing relating to this video on "item 4&5" there is a total runout indication. It relates to datums A and B. Is it datum B really necessary? I remember that in your video "Lesson 5: runout tolerances" you said that only the axis datum is really needed for runout and total runout. Am I wrong? Again thank you for your effort!

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety

      Hi, thanks for the great input! You are 100% correct. There is really no need for datum B on that runout callout. It’s a habit for me to put that on a drawing, the notion is that I want the inspector to recognize that it is the same DRF as the position tolerances, but at inspection making one point of contact to datum B to check runout is superfluous.

  • @kiranbg8063
    @kiranbg8063 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for the video
    I have a bit of a concern to locate the holes in a contour surface.
    I.e, the drilled holes in the contour surface must always be perpendicular to the curved surface. Could you please help me in understanding how to define this criteria ? Can the curved surface be a datum ? Is it possible to use an evolutive curved surface as a datum ?

  • @o3024
    @o3024 Před 2 lety

    Dean, I just finished my studies about GD&T application I fell confident in reading an drawing and interpreting it tolerances. I also know how different geometric tolerances controls the permissible errors and how it effects the parts. Although something I don’t fell confident is estimating the tolerance zone values. I know it depends on which function of each part and how it assembles but I don’t know how think in order to estimate a good tolerance value for an part. Do you know any book or references which covers examples on how to estimates this values?

  • @rosalyncampbell5231
    @rosalyncampbell5231 Před 2 lety +1

    Hello ,
    Thanks for the great way of explaining what sometimes can be very confusing. You have been my best instructor. I have a question: Can you please walk through a 3d Best Fit alignment? I would really appreciate that!

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 2 lety

      Hi, I’d be glad to help. What software are you using? What kind of part are you aligning?

  • @ashivu87
    @ashivu87 Před 9 měsíci

    Great information. Where Can we get these cool 3d printed parts?

  • @danielperry29
    @danielperry29 Před 7 měsíci

    Hey bud. Thanks for all the hard work. Can you please answer a question for me? Can you have basic dimensions as a datum or do you have to have an actual feature to use as a datum.

    • @RDeanOdell
      @RDeanOdell  Před 7 měsíci

      Hi, the datum has to come from a real feature or pattern of features, the basic dimensions must originate from there.

    • @danielperry29
      @danielperry29 Před 7 měsíci

      @@RDeanOdell thanks. You the man

  • @Animals-Kingdom2024
    @Animals-Kingdom2024 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @einHolzfaller
    @einHolzfaller Před rokem

    Hi Dean. After watching a bunch of your great videos, I am still a little unclear on how it works when you choose a hole (or hole pattern) as a datum feature. For the blue base part, when you say that you are choosing the two holes as the datum features, does that mean that the center axis of each hole is a datum feature? Or because there are two holes, is it the center plane between the two holes? If it were a hole pattern with multiple holes, would it be the center axis of the pattern?

    • @Oueax
      @Oueax Před rokem

      When choosing two holes as a datum feature, each hole has a datum axis and these axes establish a datum plane. If you have Y14.5 at hand, look at Figure 7-6 (2018 edition).
      If you have 4 holes for example and make it a datum feature, the 4 holes establis a datum system like in Figure 7-18. A pair of datum axes establishes a datum plane, and these theoretical datum planes have a derived median plane which would be the secondary and tertiary datum reference planes.
      If you have a cylindrical part and a hole pattern around a circle, the true geometric counterpart would be either an inscribed or circumscribed circle, and the datum axis would be the axis of the true geometric counterpart.

  • @honeygupta9365
    @honeygupta9365 Před rokem

    Please make more videos on Choosing datums.

  • @asadbekakbarov6447
    @asadbekakbarov6447 Před rokem

    Hi there
    Don't you take students for internship?

  • @RahulKumar-lg2zg
    @RahulKumar-lg2zg Před 2 lety

    Sir please make a video on how to check profile of surface and profile of line by CMM