Map of The GD&T World
Map of The GD&T World
Map of The GD&T World
Surfaces!
3-D!
2-D 3-D!
✗
FORM!
TANGENT PLANE!
ONLY modifier!
ORIENTATION!
U UNEQUALLY !
DISPOSED!
“EACH ELEMENT”!
PROFILE!
BETWEEN! = 2-D!
All Around!
All Over!
RUNOUT!
FREE STATE!
Features of Size
modifier!
external! shaft, boss, OD! key, tab, width! largest size! MMC + geo tol! smallest size! LMC – geo tol!
ORIENTATION! FORM! I
= Rule #1!
! !
• Assembly! • Symmetric!
• Attribute gage! • Variable gage!
• Conserving
• Boundary! wall • Tolerance zone diameter or planes!
• Bonus! thickness! • No bonus!
• Shift/MMB! • Shift/LMB! • No shift/RMB!
• Virtual Condition! • Varying AME! www.gd-t.com/map-of-gdt
©2006, 2009, 2014 Stolter, LLC
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F.O.S. stands for “feature of size” (a pin, hole, slot, etc.) **It is not a true "virtual condition" as defined in the standard,
but it does create a "worstcase boundary" that may be
important for assembly or function.
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The current standard for GD&T is ASME Y14.52009, from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. It replaces the 1994 version.
The rectangular box that contains a GD&T callout is known as the "feature control frame."
A geometric tolerance shown in a feature control frame is always total, not plus/minus. Depending on how it is used, it may be
centered around a fixed location, or it may float within a given size limit.
The datum references (the letters at the end of a feature control frame) are given in a specific order to show the relative importance of
each (primary, secondary, and tertiary).They do not have to be in alphabetical order, but rather order of precedence.
The modifier M is helpful for clearance fits. It allows the tolerance to increase as the size of the feature varies. It can also be used on
datum references if there might be looseness or "play" on those features.
Datum features should be identified on physical items (surface, hole, pin, etc.) not on an imaginary center line. Even if the true datum
might be a center, the symbol should still appear on the feature from which the center is derived.
Basic dimensions (boxed dimensions) do not have any direct tolerance. Instead, they are indirectly toleranced from a feature control frame.
Basic dimensions are most common in conjunction with position and profile controls.
Concentricity is expensive to inspect. Often, position or runout can be used to achieve the same goal. (Reason: concentricity measures
the centers of every crosssection, but position measures the center of an envelope, and runout measures the physical surface.)
One of the most powerful GD&T symbols is profile of a surface. It controls a shape (which is defined by basic dimensions) by building a
threedimensional tolerance zone around it. And depending on how it relates to the datums, it can also control orientation and location.
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M = max. mat’l condition/boundary L = least mat’l condition/boundary I = independency rule
F = free state P = projected tolerance zone U = unequal tolerance zone T = tangent plane