ASME Y14 5 1M-1994 Mathematical Definition of Dimensioning and Tolerancing Principles《尺寸计算和公差原理的数学定义》.pdf
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1、AN AMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARD ENGINEERING DRAWING AND RELATED DOCUMENTATION PRACTICES Mathematical Definition of Dimensioning and Tolerancing Principles ASME Y14.5.1M-1994 The American Society of Mechanical Engineers 345 East 47th Street, New York, N.Y. 1001 7 - Date of Issuance: January 31, 1995 Th
2、is Standard will be revised when the Society approves the issuance of a new edition. There will be no addenda or written interpretations of the require- ments of this Standard issued to this Edition. ASME is the registered trademark of The American Society of Mechanical Engineers. This code or stand
3、ard was developed under procedures accredited as meeting the criteria for American National Standards. The Consensus Committee that approved the code or standard was balanced to assure that individuals from competent and concerned interests have had an opportu- nity to participate. The proposed code
4、 or standard was made available for public review and comment which provides an opportunity for additional public input from industry, academia, regulatory agencies, and the public-at-large. ASME does not “approve,“ “rate,“ or “endorse“ any item, construction, proprietary device, or activity. ASME d
5、oes not take any position with respect to the validity of any patent rights asserted in connection with any items mentioned in this document, and does not undertake to insure anyone utilizing a standard against liability for infringement of any applicable Letters Patent, nor assume any such liabilit
6、y. Users of a code or standard are expressly advised that determination of the validity of any such patent rights, and the risk of infringement of such rights, is entirely their own responsibility. Participation by federal agency representative(s1 or person(s) affiliated with industry is not to be i
7、nterpreted as government or industry endorsement of this code or standard. ASME accepts responsibility for only those interpretations issued in accordance with governing ASME procedures and policies which preclude the issuance of interpretations by individual volunteers. No part of this document may
8、 be reproduced in any form, in an electronic retrieval system or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. Copyright 0 1995 by THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS All Rights Resewed Printed in U.S.A (This Foreword is not a part of ASME Y14.5.1M-1994.) The Y14 Committ
9、ee created the Y14.5.1 Subcommittee in response to a need identified during a National Science Foundation (NSF) workshop. The International Workshop on Me- chanical Tolerancing was held in Orlando, Florida, in late 1988. The workshop report strongly identified a need for a mathematical definition fo
10、r the current tolerancing standards. Tom Charlton coined the phrase “mathematization of tolerances.” The phrase meant to add mathe- matical rigor to the Y 14.5M standard. The response is the present standard, ASME Y 14.5.1M- 1994. This new standard creates explicit definitions for use in such areas
11、as Computer Aided Design (CAD) and Computer Aided Manufacturing (CAM). The Committee has met three times a year since their first meeting af January of 1989 in Long Boat Key, Florida. Initial discussions covered scope of the document, boundary definitions, size, and datums. The Committee identified
12、four major divisions of a tolerance: 1) the mathematical definition of the tolerance zone; 2) the mathematical definition of conformance to the tolerance; 3) the mathematical definition of the actual value; 4) the mathematical definition of the measured value. The Subcommittee later decided that the
13、 measured value was beyond the scope of this Standard. When this Standard defines part conformance, it consists of the infinite set of points that make up all the surfaces of the part, and it is addressing imperfect form semantics. This Standard does not fully address the issue of boundary, that is
14、where one surface stops and the other surface starts. The Subcommittee hopes to define this in the next edition of this Standard. The definition of size took up many days of discussions and interaction with the Y14.5 Subcommittee. It always came back to the statement of a micrometer-type two point c
15、ross- sectional measurement. The difficulty comes from the method of defining the cross-section. Consider a figure such as an imperfectly formed cylinder. When considering the infinite set of points that make up the surface, what is the intent behind a two point measurement? Most of the reasons appe
16、ar to be for strength. Yet, a two point cross-sectional definition doesnt define strength on, for instance, a three-lobed part. These and other considerations led to the existing definition. The pictorial definition, presented in Section 2, is the smallest of the largest elastic perfect spheres that
17、 can be passed through the part without breaking the surface. ws Standard does not address measurement, yet often a two point cross-sectional measurement is adequate for form, fit, and function. The subject of datums also led to many hours of work by the Subcommittee. The current definitions, presen
18、ted in Section 4, were the result of evaluating a number of approaches against four criteria: 1) conformance to Y14.5M; 2) whether a unique datum is defined; 3) whether the definition is mathematically unambiguous; and 4) whether the definition conveys design intent. A fifth criterion, whether the d
19、efinition was measurable, was not used for reasons discussed above. The end result of this work was based on feedback from the Y 14.5M Subcom- mittee when Y14.5.1 presented its analysis, and involved a change in its thinking about datums. The initial view of a datum was as something established befo
20、re a part feature is evaluated. The current definitions involve a different view that a datum existsfor the sake ofthe features related to it. The result was a consolidation of the issues involved with “wobbling” datums and the issues involved with datum features of size at MMC or LMC. These apparen
21、tly Ill . dissimilar issues are unified mathematically in the concepts of “candidate datum” and “candi- date datum reference frame.” A special thanks to the Y14 Main Committee and Y14.5 Subcommittee members in their support and encouragement in the development of this Standard. Also of note are the
22、participation and contributions of Professor Ari Requicha of University of Southern California, Professor Josh Turner of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and Professor Herb Voelcker of Cornell University. Suggestions for improvement of this Standard are welcome. They should be sent to the American
23、Society of Mechanical Engineers, Att: Secretary, Y14 Main Committee, 345 East 47th Street, New York, NY 10017. This Standard was approved as an American National Standard on November 14, 1994. iv ASME STANDARDS COMMllTEE Y14 Engineering Drawing and Related Documentation Practices (The following is t
24、he roster of the Committee at the time of approval of this Standard.) OFFICERS P. E. McKim, Chair F. Bakos, Jr., Vice-Chair C. J. Gomez, Secretary COMMIITEE PERSONNEL A. R. Anderson, Trikon Corp. F. Bakos, Jr., Eastman Kodak Co. T. D. Benoit, Alternate, Pratt b Whitney CEB D. E. Bowerman, Copeland C
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