Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 2

angularity

A three-dimensional orientation tolerance that describes the allowable variability in the angular relationship between a surface and a datum. The Dimensioning and Tolerancing standard. A two-dimensional runout tolerance that describes the distance between the surface and axis of a circular feature. A two-dimensional form tolerance that describes the allowable variability in the shape and appearance of a circle in a section view. Sharing the same axis. A three-dimensional locational tolerance that describes the location of opposing points in cylindrical features with respect to a datum reference. A three-dimensional form tolerance that describes the allowable variability in the shape and appearance of a cylinder. A specified point, line, or plane that acts as a point of reference for a feature. The combination of points, lines, and planes that define three dimensions for a part. The box that contains the geometric tolerancing requirement information for one condition of the part. A three-dimensional form tolerance that describes the allowable variability in the shape and appearance of a surface that lies in a plane. A group of geometric characteristics that describes the shape of the feature. The mathematical specification applied to a feature. A three-dimensional tolerancing system that describes a feature and its relationships in mathematical language. The circumstance of the feature with the least material during which the geometric tolerance applies. A two-dimensional tolerancing system that describes a feature in absolute maximum and minimum dimensions. A group of geometric characteristics that describes the placement of features on the part. The circumstance of the feature during which the geometric tolerance applies. The circumstance of the feature with the most material during which the geometric tolerance applies. A group of geometric characteristics that describes the angular relationship between features. A three-dimensional orientation tolerance that describes the equal distance between pairs of points, lines, or planes. A three-dimensional orientation tolerance that describes the

ASME Y14.5M-1994 circular runout circularity

coaxial concentricity

cylindricity datum datum reference frame feature control frame flatness

form tolerance geometric characteristic geometric dimensioning and tolerancing least material condition limit tolerancing location tolerance material condition modifier maximum material condition orientation tolerance parallelism perpendicularity

allowable variability in the 90 degree angular relationship between a surface and a datum. position profile of a line profile of a surface profile tolerance regardless of feature size runout tolerance straightness symmetry tolerance tolerance zone total runout A three-dimensional location tolerance that describes the exact location with respect to a datum reference. A two-dimensional profile tolerance that describes the allowable variability in the contour of the edge seen in the section view. A three-dimensional profile tolerance that describes the allowable variability in the contour of a surface. A group of geometric characteristics that describes the appearance from the two-dimensional section view. The circumstance of the feature with any amount of material, for any size, during which the geometric tolerance applies. A group of geometric characteristics that describes surfaces around an axis. A two-dimensional form tolerance that describes allowable variability in the shape and appearance of a line in a section view. A three-dimensional locational tolerance that describes the location of opposing points with respect to a datum reference. The acceptable variation from a specified dimension. The space created by the cushion of tolerance. A three-dimensional runout tolerance that describes the distance between a surface and axis.

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi