Description |
1 online resource (177 pages) |
Series |
Manufacturing Engineering Modular |
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Manufacturing Engineering Modular
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Contents |
Front Cover; Engineering Drawing for Manufacture; Copyright Page; Contents; Introduction; List of Symbols; List of Abbreviations; Chapter 1. Principles of Engineering Drawing; Chapter 2. Projection Methods; Chapter 3. ISO Drawing Rules; Chapter 4. Dimensions, Symbols and Tolerances; Chapter 5. Limits, Fits and Geometrical Tolerancing; Chapter 6. Surface Finish Specification; Appendix: Typical Examination Questions; Background and Rationale of the Series; Index |
Summary |
The processes of manufacture and assembly are based on the communication of engineering information via drawing. These drawings follow rules laid down in national and international standards. The organisation responsible for the international rules is the International Standards Organisation (ISO). There are hundreds of ISO standards on engineering drawing because drawing is very complicated and accurate transfer of information must be guaranteed. The information contained in an engineering drawing is a legal specification, which contractor and sub-contractor agree to in a binding contract. Th |
Bibliography |
References and further readingChapter 4. Dimensions, Symbols and Tolerances; 4.0 Introduction; 4.1 Dimension definitions; 4.2 Types of dimensioning; 4.3 Symbology; 4.4 Variation of features; 4.5 Tolerancing dimensions; 4.6 The legal implications of tolerancing; 4.7 The implications of tolerances for design; 4.8 Manufacturing variability and tolerances; References and further reading; Chapter 5. Limits, Fits and Geometrical Tolerancing; 5.0 Introduction; 5.1 Relationship to functional performance; 5.2 Relationship to manufacturing processes; 5.3 ISO tolerance ranges; 5.4 Limits and fits |
Notes |
Print version record |
Subject |
Engineering drawings -- Standards
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Engineering drawings.
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Form |
Electronic book
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ISBN |
9780080505664 |
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008050566X |
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9781857180336 |
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185718033X |
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