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ASME Y14.100, 4.28: The method of specifying dates on drawings shall be numerical by year-month-day for entry in the “DATE” block. For example, June 10, 1989 would be indicated as 1989-06-10, 89-06-10, 19890610, 890610, 1989/06/10, or 89/06/10. "Wildfires are dangerous, hard to control, and economically catastrophic." Ben Loosli Sr IS ...
RE: Y14.100 question - next assy/used on swertel (Mechanical) 31 Oct 07 19:10 Oh, and in terms of ASME-Y14.100, the standard allows you to tailor the requirements of your tech data package.
I'm looking for opinions on the interpretation of ASME Y14.100 6.8.1 in regards to when to change a part ID. specifically: "when the previous version of an item is limited to use in specific articles, or models of articles, and its new version is not so limited. A new PIN shall also be assigned to all subsequent higher assemblies up to the level at
My employer's drawing standards are to be interpreted per IAW ASME Y14.100-2004. With that said, the CAD package we are moving to has the option in an assembly drawing to create item ballons that are "circular split line balloons" which segments the balloon into upper and lower halves.
ASME Y14.100 probably gives the most explicit explanation of when a new part number is assigned rather than a new revision. I have the 2004 standard in which 6.8.1 is the relevant section. My summarized version is if the part after the change is completely interchangeable with the old part (think the 2 parts could be put in a bin and either ...
re: asme y14.100-2013 ewh (Aerospace) 24 Sep 14 16:28 The Summary Of Changes page in Y14.100-2013 isn't very helpful, just noting what new paragraphs were revised or added for the most part without any helpful detail of the kind you are looking for.
RE: Y14.100 Revision Method ewh (Aerospace) 10 Aug 10 10:20 My experience is different from yours... working with military contractors (who were definitely bound to the standards), we always used an internal scheme for pre-released drawings (p1 for first preliminary version, etc), releasing at rev "-" and using letters for any subsequent revisions.
The closest I find is ASME Y14.35M. But it does not list anything about numerical revs. At the past few companies I worked at, numerical was always used for pre-production (preliminary) then was released at revision A. We still do this now and is accepted by ISO 2000. Chris Sr. Mechanical Designer, CAD SolidWorks 05 SP0.1 / PDMWorks 05 ctopher ...
Look at ASME Y14.35M Revision of Engineering Drawings and Associated Documents. Section 4.3.1 is relevant though it is talking about redrawn drawing with a change "The names of the individuals whose signatures appeared in the t?title block of the old original ... are entered on the new original"
Need A copy of ASME Y14.100 Need A copy of ASME Y14.100 ITBrusco (Military) (OP) 18 Feb 04 15:31.