Are technical drawings necessary?

Discussion in 'SolidWorks' started by nora.onofrio, May 23, 2007.

  1. nora.onofrio

    nora.onofrio Guest

    I work in the lighting industry- pedestrian scale light fixtures- and
    the majority of our manufactured parts are die and sand cast. Before I
    came to this company the process was to design the parts in 3d CAD,
    create a technical drawing with only critical fit and function
    dimensions (mostly for inspection purposes) and only qualify vendors
    who would make the part from the model. The main reason for this is
    each part will only have maybe 10-15 critical dimensions, but a
    considerable amount of cosmetic surfaces that are difficult and timely
    to dimension.

    Now, however, because of quality issues, we are starting to go back to
    full dimensioning so that we have back-up when the vendor produces a
    sub-par part. I think that having a written clause in the purchase
    order and well as a note on the drawing stating "Part must meet
    critical dimensions and match 3d model within acceptable tolerances"
    should be enough.

    Question: How does your company deal with this process? Are there any
    good solutions you have come up with? Do we really just have to go
    back to the days of full dimensioning?

    thank-you!

    ** If there's a better place to post this question let me know, I love
    solidworks so i'm posting here =)
     
    nora.onofrio, May 23, 2007
    #1
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