03-15-2015, 12:18 PM
On drawing chamfers, I usually describe the width of the face of the chamfer and the angle. I try to describe the angle so it relates to the chuck or vise as the part is held in the machine -- that way I don't have to do math on the fly... always a recipe for disaster. I find that my projects turn out better if I spend more time doing thoughtful drawings.
This, according to my high school drafting teacher, which was 35 years ago.
That internal chamfer on the rectangular socket looks like it's probably for ease of assembly. Looks die cast. Lots of funny fillets in that part. Obviously a pretty mission critical part, I'd definitely make the replacement out of some stout material. Forged titanium perhaps? lol...
This, according to my high school drafting teacher, which was 35 years ago.
That internal chamfer on the rectangular socket looks like it's probably for ease of assembly. Looks die cast. Lots of funny fillets in that part. Obviously a pretty mission critical part, I'd definitely make the replacement out of some stout material. Forged titanium perhaps? lol...