If a Blueprint calls for ASME Y14.5 wouldn't this be the standard rules apply. How would I know if and when to apply ISO? I have yet to see anything on a blueprint stating this. The reason I bring this up is for the good old Profile callout. Before I make an argument, I want to cover all my resources. Customer already claims in an email that PC-DMIS is not capable of doing this. I and everyone on here already that's horse_S_H_I_T. But its Friday and I'm ready to P_I_S_S someone off
no, no I know this. I'm saying should there be a callout on the actual blue print? It does state interpret print per ASME Y14.5M-1994, Should there be something on print stating to interpret ISO 1101?
no, no I know this. I'm saying should there be a callout on the actual blue print? It does state interpret print per ASME Y14.5M-1994, Should there be something on print stating to interpret ISO 1101? Like apply ISO 1101 to profile or something like this?
If your customer claims PC-DMIS cannot do ISO - he is partly correct, in a way... You see in earlier versions of PC-DMIS the default calculation was ASME and there were NO obvious way to change this. Even today, operators around the world are running old(er) versions of PC-DMIS calculating profile according to ASME when they actually should calculate it according to ISO! Sigh... Maybe this is what the customer claims?
In newer versions, this is controlled by the combobox in the XactMeasure (FCF builder) dialog, so it has become MUCH easier to control which STD should be used for calculation.
The solution for older versions is to set the registry flag "UseISOCalculations" to TRUE and PC-DMIS will calculate profile according to ISO. I am not sure if the registry key even exist before you add/change it(!). For this to apply, you need to restart PC-DMIS every time you change it in order for the partprogram to calculate it accordingly.
What is the customers claim exactly? That PC-DMIS can't do ISO or ASME?
The customer claims PC-DMIS cannot. I already know that in XACTMEASURE it can. My question is that on the blueprint should it say CHECK according to ISO, now according to
AndersI this is not ISO?
Kirby, a print cannot be both ASME and ISO. If it says ASME, then it's ASME. If it say ISO, then it's ISO. ISO and ASME are two wholly different standards. They are not applied case by case. You can't apply ISO to the surface profile when the print says interpret per ASME.
And if it doesn't say either way, then flip a coin.
VinniUSMC, Theres the answer I was looking for. Hey do you have an actual print that shows Interpret the drawing according to ISO? Maybe send me a snap shot like the one above. I do not have a print that states this
We have a customer that has a print that specifically says to measure to ASME Y14.5M-2009, but wants the profile to be in ISO (2x the maximum deviation). How about them apples?