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Including Geometric Feature Variations in Tolerance Analysis of Mechanical Assemblies
166
Citations
12
References
1996
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringComputer-aided DesignStructural OptimizationComputational MechanicsDimensioning And TolerancingAssembly Tolerance AnalysisGeometric Constraint SolvingMechanicsStructural TopologySystems EngineeringGeometrical AccuracyComputational GeometryMaterials ScienceGeometric ModelingMechanical BehaviorTolerance AnalysisMechanical ModelingComputer EngineeringNatural SciencesGeometric Feature VariationsMechanical SystemsAssembly LineStructural MechanicsSolid ModelingMechanics Of Materials
Geometric feature variations are the result of variations in the shape, orientation or location of part features as defined in ANSI Y14.5M-1982 tolerance standard. When such feature variations occur on the mating surfaces between components of an assembly, they affect the variation of the completed assembly. The geometric feature variations accumulate statistically and propagate kinematically in a similar manner to the dimensional variations of the components in the assembly.The direct linearization method (DLM) for assembly tolerance analysis provides a means of estimating variations and assembly rejects, caused by the dimensional variations of the components in an assembly. So far no generalized approach has been developed to include all geometric feature variations in a computer-aided tolerance analysis system.This paper introduces a new, generalized approach for including all the geometric feature variations in the tolerance analysis of mechanical assemblies. It focuses on how to characterize geometric feature variations in vector-loop-based assembly tolerance models. The characterization will be used to help combine the effects of all variations within an assembly to predict assembly rejects using the DLM.
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