SECTION 3 SURFACE TEXTURE

3.1 SCOPE OF SECTION This Section provides information on the indication of surface texture on
mechanical engineeringdrawingsandsimilar applications.For a more complete understandingof surface
texture, reference should be made to AS 2536.
3.2 SYMBOLS
3.2.1 Basic symbol The basic symbol is shown in Figure 3.1. The dimensions of surface texture
symbols are shown in Figure 3.2. Sloping lines in the symbol are at 60° to the horizontal.
3.2.2 Modification to basic symbol The following modifications may be made to the basic symbol:
(a) The symbol to be used where machining is mandatory shall be the basic symbol with a bar
added, as shown in Figure 3.3.
This symbol may be used alone to indicate that a surface is to be machined without defining
either the surface texture or the process to be used.
(b) The symbol to be used when the removal of material is not permitted shall be the basic symbol
with a circle added, as shown in Figure 3.4. This symbol may be used alone to indicate that a
surface is to be left in the state resulting from a preceding manufacturing process.
3.2.3 Extension of symbols When special surface characteristics are to be indicated (see Clause
3.4), the symbols shown in Figures 3.1, 3.3 and 3.4 may be extended by adding a line of appropriate
length to the long leg, as shown in Figure 3.5.

Australian Standard
Technical drawing
Part 201: Mechanical engineering drawing
Accessed by WOODSIDE ENERGY LTD on 21 Nov 2001



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  • The application of welding symbols to working drawings

    The following notes are meant as a guide to the method
    of applying the more commonly used welding symbols
    relating to the simpler types of welded joints on
    engineering drawings. Where complex joints involve
    multiple welds it is often easier to detail such constructions
    on separate drawing sheets.
    Each type of weld is characterized by a symbol
    given in Table 26.1 Note that the symbol is representative
    of the shape of the weld, or the edge preparation, but
    does not indicate any particular welding process and
    does not specify either the number of runs to be deposited
    or whether or not a root gap or backing material is
    to be used. These details would be provided on a welding
    procedure schedule for the particular job.
    It may be necessary to specify the shape of the weld
    surface on the drawing as flat, convex or concave and
    a supplementary symbol, shown in Table 26.2, is then
    added to the elementary symbol. An example of each
    type of weld surface application is given in Table 26.3.
    A joint may also be made with one type of weld on
    a particular surface and another type of weld on the
    back and in this case elementary symbols representing
    each type of weld used are added together. The last
    example in Table 26.3 shows a single-V butt weld
    with a backing run where both surfaces are required to
    have a flat finish.
    A welding symbol is applied to a drawing by using
    a reference line and an arrow line as shown in Fig.
    26.1. The reference line should be drawn parallel to
    the bottom edge of the drawing sheet and the arrow
    line forms an angle with the reference line. The side of
    the joint nearer the arrow head is known as the ‘arrow
    side’ and the remote side as the ‘other side’.
    The welding symbol should be positioned on the
    reference line as indicated in Table 26.4.
    Sketch (a) shows the symbol for a single-V butt
    weld below the reference line because the external
    surface of the weld is on the arrow side of the joint.
    Sketch (b) shows the same symbol above the
    reference line because the external surface of the weld
    is on the other side of the joint.
    Manual of
    Engineering Drawing
    Second edition
    Colin H Simmons
    I.Eng, FIED, Mem ASME.
    Engineering Standards Consultant
    Member of BS. & ISO Committees dealing with
    Technical Product Documentation specifications
    Formerly Standards Engineer, Lucas CAV.
    Dennis E Maguire
    CEng. MIMechE, Mem ASME, R.Eng.Des, MIED
    Design Consultant
    Formerly Senior Lecturer, Mechanical and
    Production Engineering Department, Southall College
    of Technology
    City & Guilds International Chief Examiner in
    Engineering Drawing

    Elsevier Newnes
    Linacre House, Jordan Hill, Oxford OX2 8DP
    200 Wheeler Road, Burlington MA 01803




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  • EVOLUTION OF A DESIGN

    Most likely you have, right at this moment, at least one machine design project in progress. Maybe you were the originator of the design, but I suspect you inherited this design from others. I further suspect that you have already identified elements of the design you feel could be improved. You might be under pressure from customer service or marketing to respond to some need for change. In responding successfully, either to your own observations for change or to those of others, the design will evolve. Recognizing that the evolutionary design process is decidedly complex, with a seemingly random sequence of steps, the primary purpose of Standard Handbook of Machine Design is to make the information you need as readily accessible and usable as possible. As an example of how a design can evolve, and to provide perspective on how the information in this Handbook has traditionally been used, let me review for you a project I was given in my first job as a mechanical engineer. It involved the positioning of a microwave feed horn for a 30-ft-diameter antenna dish.The original gn (not mine, by the way) called for a technician to climb up onto a platform, some 20 ft off the ground, near the backside of the feed horn.The technician had to loosen a half dozen bolts, rotate the feed horn manually, and then retighten the bolts. This design worked quite well until several systems were sold to a customer providing telecommunications along the Alaskan oil pipeline. Workers were not really safe going out in below 0°F weather,with snow and ice on everything. As a result of their concerns for safety, this customer asked that we provide remote positioning of the feed horn from the nearby control room. The critical design requirement was that the positioning of the feed horn needed to be relatively precise. This meant that our design had to have as little backlash in the drive mechanism as possible. Being a young engineer, I was unaware of the wide variety of different drive systems, in particular their respective properties and capa- bilities. I asked one of the older engineers for some direction. He suggested I use a worm drive since it cannot be back driven, and loaned me his copy of Joseph Shigley’s book, Mechanical Engineering Design. He said that Shigley’s book (a precursor to this Handbook) had been his primary source of information about worm drives, and a wealth of other machine design information. As it turned out, the resulting design worked as required. It not only pleased our Alaskan customer but became a standard on all antenna systems. I did not get a promotion as a result of the success of this new design, nor did I receive a raise. However, I was proud, and, as you can surmise, still am. I credit this successful design evolution to the material on worm drives in Shigley’s book. And there is more to this story. The worm drive gearbox we ultimately purchased contained a plastic drive element. This allowed the backlash to be greater than what could be tolerated in positioning accuracy and did not provide the necessary strength to break the feed horn loose from a covering of ice.The original manufacturer of the gearbox refused to change this drive element to metal for the units we would be buying. If we made the change ourselves, they said, the warranty would be voided. However, after absorbing the wealth of information on worm drives in Shigley’s book, I felt confident that we could make this substitution without endangering the reliability of the unit. Also, because of Joseph Shigley’s reputation in the mechanical engineering community and the extensive list of references he cited, I never felt the need to consult other sources. Another aspect of this story is also important to note. In addition to the information on worm drives, I also used Shigley’s book to find comprehensive design information on the many other machine elements in the new design: gear train geometry, chain drives, couplings, roller bearings, bolted joints, welds, lubrication, corrosion, and the necessary stress and deformation calculations I needed to make. All this information, and much more, was contained in the First Edition of the Standard Handbook of Machine Design, which Joseph Shigley coauthored with Charles Mischke. Now in its Third Edition, this Handbook includes the information machine design engineers have come to trust.We hope you will find this information invaluable as you constantly strive to improve your designs, whether by your own initiatives, or for other reasons.
    Thomas H. Brown, Jr., Ph.D., P.E.
    Faculty Associate
    Institute for Transportation Research and Education
    North Carolina State University
    Raleigh, North Carolina
    Source: STANDARD HANDBOOK OF MACHINE DESIGN
    Downloaded from Digital Engineering Library @ McGraw-Hill (www.digitalengineeringlibrary.com)
     

    Injection Forging—Process and Component

    Injection forging is a process in which the work-material retained in an injection chamber is injected into a die-cavity in a form prescribed by the geometry of the exit (Fig. 1). The process is characterized by the combination of axial and radial flows of material to form the required component-form. In the 1960s, some interest was generated in injection upsetting [1]; it was developed with a view to extruding complex component-forms. The process configuration has since been the subject of research spanning fundamental analysis to the forming of specific components; branched components and gear-forms have been produced. The single-stage forming of such component-forms has been achieved by injection techniques; these forms were previously regarded as unformable by conventional processes. Currently, the nett-forming of some complex component-forms has been achieved by Injection Forging [2]. To date, several names have been used to describe this configuration—injection forming, injection upsetting, radial extrusion, side extrusion, transverse extrusion, lateral extrusion, and injection forging [2–22].

    COMPUTER-AIDED DESIGN,
    ENGINEERING, AND MANUFACTURING
    Systems Techniques And Applications
    VOLUME
    V I
    MANUFACTURING
    SYSTEMS PROCESSES
    Editor
    CORNELIUS LEONDES
    CRC Press
    Boca Raton London New York Washington, D.C.