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GATEWAY




        Tolerance Design




       Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
Sl. #1 University
GATEWAY
Design Specifications and
Tolerance
 •    Develop from quest for production
      quality and efficiency

 •    Early tolerances support design’s basic
      function

 •    Mass production brought
      interchangeability

 •    Integrate design and mfg tolerances
            Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
     Sl. #2 University
GATEWAY

Definition


   “The total amount by which a given
    dimension may vary, or the
    difference between the limits”
                  - ANSI Y14.5M-1982(R1988) Standard [R1.4]




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #3 University                                      Source: Tolerance Design, p 10
GATEWAY

Affected Areas

                     Engineering
                      Tolerance

Product Design                                    Quality Control




                        Manufacturing


          Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
   Sl. #4 University
GATEWAY

Questions

•   “Can customer tolerances be
    accommodated by product?”

•   “Can product tolerances be
    accommodated by the process?”




           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #5 University
GATEWAY
    Tolerance vs. Manufacturing
    Process
•   Nominal tolerances for
    steel
•   Tighter tolerances =>
    increase cost $




             Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
      Sl. #6 University
GATEWAY

Geometric Dimensions

•   Accurately communicates the function of
    part

•   Provides uniform clarity in drawing
    delineation and interpretation

•   Provides maximum production tolerance


           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #7 University
GATEWAY

Tolerance Types

   •   Size
   •   Form
   •   Location
   •   Orientation




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #8 University
GATEWAY

Size Tolerances




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #9 University
GATEWAY

Form Tolerances




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #10University
GATEWAY

Location Tolerances




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #11University
GATEWAY

Orientation Tolerances




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #12University
GATEWAY

Tolerance Buildup




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #13University
GATEWAY

Statistical Principles
 •   Measurement of central tendency
     − Mean
     − Median
     − mode
 •   Measurement of variations
     − Range                            LSL                  X          USL
     − Variance
     − Standard deviation
                                                                   3σ
                                                      tolerance
            Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
     Sl. #14University
GATEWAY

Probability

 •    Probability
       − Likelihood of occurrence

 •    Capability
       − Relate the mean and variability of
         the process or machine to the
         permissible range of dimensions
         allowed by the specification or
         tolerance.


            Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
     Sl. #15University
GATEWAY

Tolerance SPC Charting




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #16University                                  Figure Source: Tolerance Design, p 125
GATEWAY

Tolerance Analysis Methods


      •   Worst-Case analysis
      •   Root Sum of Squares
      •   Taguchi tolerance design




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #17University
GATEWAY

Initial Tolerance Design



                                      Initial
                                    Tolerance
                                     Design




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #18University                                  Figure Source: Tolerance Design, p 93
GATEWAY

References
•   Handbook of Product Design for Manufacturing: A Practical
    Guide to Low-Cost Production, James C. Bralla, Ed. in Chief;
    McGraw-Hill, 1986
•   Manufacturing Processes Reference Guide, R.H. Todd, D.K. Allen
    & L. Alting; Industrial Press Inc., 1994


•   Standard tolerances for mfg processes
    −    Machinery’s Handbook; Industrial Press
    −    Standard Handbook of Machine Design; McGraw-Hill
    −    Standard Handbook of Mechanical Engineers; McGraw-Hill
    −    Design of Machine Elements; Spotts, Prentic Hall



               Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
        Sl. #19University                                Figure Source: Tolerance Design, p 92-93
GATEWAY

Worst-Case Methodology

•   Extreme or most liberal condition of
    tolerance buildup

•   “…tolerances must be assigned to the
    component parts of the mechanism in
    such a manner that the probability that a
    mechanism will not function is zero…”
                                            - Evans (1974)


           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #20University
GATEWAY

Worst-Case Analysis
                        m
              WCmax = ∑ (N p i + Tp i )
                        i=1

                        m
              WCmin = ∑ (N p i − Tp i )
                        i=1



•   Ne + Te => Maximum assembly
    envelope
•   Ne - Te => Minimum assembly
    envelope of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
      Department
      University
    Sl. #21                               Source: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 13-14.
GATEWAY

Assembly gaps
                              m
     Gmax = N e + Te − ∑ (N p i − Tp i )
                             i=1

                              m
      Gmin = N e − Te − ∑ (N p i + Tp i )
                              i=1

                               m
            Gnom = N e − ∑ (N p i )
                              i=1


         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #22University
GATEWAY

Worst Case Scenario Example




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #23University                                     Source: Tolerance Design, pp 109-111
GATEWAY

Worst Case Scenario Example




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #24University                                     Source: Tolerance Design, pp 109-111
GATEWAY

Worst Case Scenario Example




             • Largest => 0.05 + 0.093 = 0.143

             • Smallest => 0.05 - 0.093 = -0.043


         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #25University                                     Source: Tolerance Design, pp 109-111
GATEWAY

Non-Linear Tolerances

                  y = f (x1, x 2 , x 3 ,...x n )

        ∂f         ∂f          ∂f               ∂f
 Toly =     tol1 +      tol2 +      tol3 + ...+      toln
        ∂x1        ∂x 2        ∂x 3             ∂x n


        ∂f       ∂f        ∂f              ∂f
 Nomy ≈     x1 +      x2 +      x 3 + ...+      xn
        ∂x1      ∂x 2      ∂x 3            ∂x n

         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #26University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 104
GATEWAY

Root Sum-of-Square

•   RSS
•   Assumes normal distribution
    behavior
                          1    −(1/ 2)[x− μ )/σ ]2
                f (x) =      e
                        σ 2π



           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #27University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 16
GATEWAY

RSS method

•   Assembly tolerance stack equation



        f (x) = T + T + T + ...T  1
                                   2
                                               2
                                                2
                                                             3
                                                              2
                                                                              n
                                                                               2




           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #28University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

Pool Variance in RSS

                                            Tol
                           σ adjusted     =
                                            3Cp


                      ⎛ Te ⎞      ⎛ Tpi ⎞2       m                   2

          σ gap     = ⎜     ⎟ + ∑⎜       ⎟
                      ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠


         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #29University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

Probability
                                      Q − Gnom
                           ZQ =
                                          σ gap

                                ⎛        m     ⎞
                            Q − ⎜ N e − ∑ N pi ⎟
                                ⎝              ⎠
             ZQ =                       i=1

                          ⎛ Te ⎞      ⎛ Tpi ⎞ 2
                                      2      m

                          ⎜     ⎟ + ∑⎜       ⎟
                          ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠

         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #30University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

Probability for Limits
                                       Gmin − Gnom
                 ZG min =
                                ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞
                                                     2

                                ⎜     ⎟ + ∑⎜       ⎟
                                ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠



                                       Gmax − Gnom
                 ZG max =
                                 ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞
                                                      2

                                 ⎜     ⎟ + ∑⎜       ⎟
                                 ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠


         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #31University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

Dynamic RSS
                                       Gmin − Gnom
              ZG min =
                              ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞
                                                      2

                              ⎜      ⎟ + ∑⎜         ⎟
                              ⎝ 3Cpk ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpk i ⎠



                                       Gmax − Gnom
               ZG max =
                               ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞
                                                       2

                               ⎜      ⎟ + ∑⎜         ⎟
                               ⎝ 3Cpk ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpk i ⎠


         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #32University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

Nonlinear RSS


       ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 2 ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 2 ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 2                  ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2
Toly = ⎜ ⎟ tol 1 + ⎜      ⎟ tol 2 + ⎜      ⎟ tol3 + ...+ ⎜      ⎟ toln
       ⎝ ∂x1 ⎠     ⎝ ∂x 2 ⎠         ⎝ ∂x 3 ⎠             ⎝ ∂x n ⎠


                                               Toli
                            σ adjusted      =
                                              3Cpki


           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #33University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

RSS Example




                 • Largest => 0.05 + 0.051 = 0.101

                 • Smallest => 0.05 - 0.051 = -0.001

         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #34University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
GATEWAY

Taguchi Method
Input from the voice of the customer and QFD processes

    Select proper quality-loss function for the design

     Determine customer tolerance values for terms
                in Quality Loss Function

              Determine cost to business to adjust

                Calculate Manufacturing Tolerance

                     Proceed to tolerance design

          Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
   Sl. #35University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 21
GATEWAY

Taguchi

 •   Voice of customer
 •   Quality function deployment
 •   Inputs from parameter design
      − Optimum control-factor set points
      − Tolerance estimates
      − Initial material grades




         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #36University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 22
GATEWAY

Quality Loss Function

•   Identify customer costs for intolerable
    performance
•   Quadratic quality loss function
                               Ao
             L(y) = k(y − m) =    (y − m) 22

                               Δo




           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #37University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 208
GATEWAY
Cost of Off Target and
Sensitivity
•   Cost to business to adjust off target
    performance
•   Sensitivity, β

                        Ao                        Ao
             φ=                                A = [β (x − m)]2
                        A                         Δ



           Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
    Sl. #38University                           Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 226-227
GATEWAY

Manufacturing Tolerance



                             Ao ⎛ Δ o ⎞
                  Δ=            ⎜ ⎟
                             A⎝β⎠



         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #39University
GATEWAY

Summary

 •    Importance of effective tolerances
 •    Tolerance Design Approaches
       − Worst-Case analysis
       − Root Sum of Squares
       − Taguchi tolerance method
 •    Continual process
 •    Involvement of multi-disciplines

            Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
     Sl. #40University
GATEWAY

Credits
•    This module is intended as a supplement to design classes
     in mechanical engineering. It was developed at The Ohio
     State University under the NSF sponsored Gateway
     Coalition (grant EEC-9109794). Contributing members
     include:


•    Gary Kinzel…………………………………. Project supervisor
•    Phuong Pham.……………. ………………... Primary author

    Reference:
       “Six Sigma Mechanical Design Tolerancing”, Harry, Mikel J. and Reigle
                    Stewart, Motorola Inc. , 1988.
       Creveling, C.M., Tolerance Design, Addison-Wesley, Reading, 1997.
       Wade, Oliver R., Tolerance Control in Design and Manufacturing,
                    Industrial Press Inc., New York, 1967.

             Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
      Sl. #41University
GATEWAY

Disclaimer
   This information is provided “as is” for general educational
  purposes; it can change over time and should be interpreted
  with regards to this particular circumstance. While much effort
  is made to provide complete information, Ohio State University
  and Gateway do not guarantee the accuracy and reliability of
  any information contained or displayed in the presentation. We
  disclaim any warranty, expressed or implied, including the
  warranties of fitness for a particular purpose. We do not
  assume any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy,
  completeness, reliability, timeliness or usefulness of any
  information, or processes disclosed. Nor will Ohio State
  University or Gateway be held liable for any improper or
  incorrect use of the information described and/or contain herein
  and assumes no responsibility for anyone’s use of the
  information. Reference to any specific commercial product,
  process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacture, or
  otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its
  endorsement.
         Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State
  Sl. #42University

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DS-005-Tolerance Design

  • 1. GATEWAY Tolerance Design Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #1 University
  • 2. GATEWAY Design Specifications and Tolerance • Develop from quest for production quality and efficiency • Early tolerances support design’s basic function • Mass production brought interchangeability • Integrate design and mfg tolerances Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #2 University
  • 3. GATEWAY Definition “The total amount by which a given dimension may vary, or the difference between the limits” - ANSI Y14.5M-1982(R1988) Standard [R1.4] Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #3 University Source: Tolerance Design, p 10
  • 4. GATEWAY Affected Areas Engineering Tolerance Product Design Quality Control Manufacturing Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #4 University
  • 5. GATEWAY Questions • “Can customer tolerances be accommodated by product?” • “Can product tolerances be accommodated by the process?” Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #5 University
  • 6. GATEWAY Tolerance vs. Manufacturing Process • Nominal tolerances for steel • Tighter tolerances => increase cost $ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #6 University
  • 7. GATEWAY Geometric Dimensions • Accurately communicates the function of part • Provides uniform clarity in drawing delineation and interpretation • Provides maximum production tolerance Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #7 University
  • 8. GATEWAY Tolerance Types • Size • Form • Location • Orientation Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #8 University
  • 9. GATEWAY Size Tolerances Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #9 University
  • 10. GATEWAY Form Tolerances Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #10University
  • 11. GATEWAY Location Tolerances Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #11University
  • 12. GATEWAY Orientation Tolerances Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #12University
  • 13. GATEWAY Tolerance Buildup Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #13University
  • 14. GATEWAY Statistical Principles • Measurement of central tendency − Mean − Median − mode • Measurement of variations − Range LSL X USL − Variance − Standard deviation 3σ tolerance Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #14University
  • 15. GATEWAY Probability • Probability − Likelihood of occurrence • Capability − Relate the mean and variability of the process or machine to the permissible range of dimensions allowed by the specification or tolerance. Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #15University
  • 16. GATEWAY Tolerance SPC Charting Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #16University Figure Source: Tolerance Design, p 125
  • 17. GATEWAY Tolerance Analysis Methods • Worst-Case analysis • Root Sum of Squares • Taguchi tolerance design Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #17University
  • 18. GATEWAY Initial Tolerance Design Initial Tolerance Design Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #18University Figure Source: Tolerance Design, p 93
  • 19. GATEWAY References • Handbook of Product Design for Manufacturing: A Practical Guide to Low-Cost Production, James C. Bralla, Ed. in Chief; McGraw-Hill, 1986 • Manufacturing Processes Reference Guide, R.H. Todd, D.K. Allen & L. Alting; Industrial Press Inc., 1994 • Standard tolerances for mfg processes − Machinery’s Handbook; Industrial Press − Standard Handbook of Machine Design; McGraw-Hill − Standard Handbook of Mechanical Engineers; McGraw-Hill − Design of Machine Elements; Spotts, Prentic Hall Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #19University Figure Source: Tolerance Design, p 92-93
  • 20. GATEWAY Worst-Case Methodology • Extreme or most liberal condition of tolerance buildup • “…tolerances must be assigned to the component parts of the mechanism in such a manner that the probability that a mechanism will not function is zero…” - Evans (1974) Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #20University
  • 21. GATEWAY Worst-Case Analysis m WCmax = ∑ (N p i + Tp i ) i=1 m WCmin = ∑ (N p i − Tp i ) i=1 • Ne + Te => Maximum assembly envelope • Ne - Te => Minimum assembly envelope of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Department University Sl. #21 Source: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 13-14.
  • 22. GATEWAY Assembly gaps m Gmax = N e + Te − ∑ (N p i − Tp i ) i=1 m Gmin = N e − Te − ∑ (N p i + Tp i ) i=1 m Gnom = N e − ∑ (N p i ) i=1 Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #22University
  • 23. GATEWAY Worst Case Scenario Example Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #23University Source: Tolerance Design, pp 109-111
  • 24. GATEWAY Worst Case Scenario Example Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #24University Source: Tolerance Design, pp 109-111
  • 25. GATEWAY Worst Case Scenario Example • Largest => 0.05 + 0.093 = 0.143 • Smallest => 0.05 - 0.093 = -0.043 Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #25University Source: Tolerance Design, pp 109-111
  • 26. GATEWAY Non-Linear Tolerances y = f (x1, x 2 , x 3 ,...x n ) ∂f ∂f ∂f ∂f Toly = tol1 + tol2 + tol3 + ...+ toln ∂x1 ∂x 2 ∂x 3 ∂x n ∂f ∂f ∂f ∂f Nomy ≈ x1 + x2 + x 3 + ...+ xn ∂x1 ∂x 2 ∂x 3 ∂x n Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #26University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 104
  • 27. GATEWAY Root Sum-of-Square • RSS • Assumes normal distribution behavior 1 −(1/ 2)[x− μ )/σ ]2 f (x) = e σ 2π Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #27University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 16
  • 28. GATEWAY RSS method • Assembly tolerance stack equation f (x) = T + T + T + ...T 1 2 2 2 3 2 n 2 Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #28University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 29. GATEWAY Pool Variance in RSS Tol σ adjusted = 3Cp ⎛ Te ⎞ ⎛ Tpi ⎞2 m 2 σ gap = ⎜ ⎟ + ∑⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #29University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 30. GATEWAY Probability Q − Gnom ZQ = σ gap ⎛ m ⎞ Q − ⎜ N e − ∑ N pi ⎟ ⎝ ⎠ ZQ = i=1 ⎛ Te ⎞ ⎛ Tpi ⎞ 2 2 m ⎜ ⎟ + ∑⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #30University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 31. GATEWAY Probability for Limits Gmin − Gnom ZG min = ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞ 2 ⎜ ⎟ + ∑⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠ Gmax − Gnom ZG max = ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞ 2 ⎜ ⎟ + ∑⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3Cp ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpi ⎠ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #31University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 32. GATEWAY Dynamic RSS Gmin − Gnom ZG min = ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞ 2 ⎜ ⎟ + ∑⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3Cpk ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpk i ⎠ Gmax − Gnom ZG max = ⎛ Te ⎞ 2 m ⎛ Tpi ⎞ 2 ⎜ ⎟ + ∑⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3Cpk ⎠ i=1 ⎝ 3Cpk i ⎠ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #32University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 33. GATEWAY Nonlinear RSS ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 2 ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 2 ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 2 ⎛ ∂f ⎞ 2 Toly = ⎜ ⎟ tol 1 + ⎜ ⎟ tol 2 + ⎜ ⎟ tol3 + ...+ ⎜ ⎟ toln ⎝ ∂x1 ⎠ ⎝ ∂x 2 ⎠ ⎝ ∂x 3 ⎠ ⎝ ∂x n ⎠ Toli σ adjusted = 3Cpki Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #33University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 34. GATEWAY RSS Example • Largest => 0.05 + 0.051 = 0.101 • Smallest => 0.05 - 0.051 = -0.001 Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #34University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 128
  • 35. GATEWAY Taguchi Method Input from the voice of the customer and QFD processes Select proper quality-loss function for the design Determine customer tolerance values for terms in Quality Loss Function Determine cost to business to adjust Calculate Manufacturing Tolerance Proceed to tolerance design Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #35University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 21
  • 36. GATEWAY Taguchi • Voice of customer • Quality function deployment • Inputs from parameter design − Optimum control-factor set points − Tolerance estimates − Initial material grades Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #36University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 22
  • 37. GATEWAY Quality Loss Function • Identify customer costs for intolerable performance • Quadratic quality loss function Ao L(y) = k(y − m) = (y − m) 22 Δo Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #37University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 208
  • 38. GATEWAY Cost of Off Target and Sensitivity • Cost to business to adjust off target performance • Sensitivity, β Ao Ao φ= A = [β (x − m)]2 A Δ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #38University Wource: “Six sigma mechanical design tolerancing”, p 226-227
  • 39. GATEWAY Manufacturing Tolerance Ao ⎛ Δ o ⎞ Δ= ⎜ ⎟ A⎝β⎠ Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #39University
  • 40. GATEWAY Summary • Importance of effective tolerances • Tolerance Design Approaches − Worst-Case analysis − Root Sum of Squares − Taguchi tolerance method • Continual process • Involvement of multi-disciplines Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #40University
  • 41. GATEWAY Credits • This module is intended as a supplement to design classes in mechanical engineering. It was developed at The Ohio State University under the NSF sponsored Gateway Coalition (grant EEC-9109794). Contributing members include: • Gary Kinzel…………………………………. Project supervisor • Phuong Pham.……………. ………………... Primary author Reference: “Six Sigma Mechanical Design Tolerancing”, Harry, Mikel J. and Reigle Stewart, Motorola Inc. , 1988. Creveling, C.M., Tolerance Design, Addison-Wesley, Reading, 1997. Wade, Oliver R., Tolerance Control in Design and Manufacturing, Industrial Press Inc., New York, 1967. Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #41University
  • 42. GATEWAY Disclaimer This information is provided “as is” for general educational purposes; it can change over time and should be interpreted with regards to this particular circumstance. While much effort is made to provide complete information, Ohio State University and Gateway do not guarantee the accuracy and reliability of any information contained or displayed in the presentation. We disclaim any warranty, expressed or implied, including the warranties of fitness for a particular purpose. We do not assume any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, reliability, timeliness or usefulness of any information, or processes disclosed. Nor will Ohio State University or Gateway be held liable for any improper or incorrect use of the information described and/or contain herein and assumes no responsibility for anyone’s use of the information. Reference to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacture, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement. Department of Mechanical Engineering, The Ohio State Sl. #42University