IT Grade

IT Grade refers to the International Tolerance Grade of an industrial process defined in ISO 286.[1] This grade identifies what tolerances a given process can produce for a given dimension.

The specific Tolerance for a particular IT grade is calculated via the following formula:[2]

T=10^{0.2 \times (ITG-1)} \cdot (0.45 \times \sqrt[3]{D}%2B0.001\times D)

where:

One thinks of D as being the key dimension on the part and T as being the required tolerance on that key dimension. The larger the ITG, the looser the tolerance.

Contents

Meaning and interpretation

An industrial process has an IT Grade associated with, indicating how precise it is. When designing a part, an engineer will typically determine a key dimension (D) and some tolerance (T) on that dimension. Using this formula, the engineer can determine what IT Grade is necessary to produce the part with those specifications. Thus, if injection molding has an IT Grade of 13 and a part needs an IT Grade of 5, one cannot injection mold that part to those specifications. It is useful in determining the processes capable of producing parts to the needed specification.

Alternate formulation

The following has been proposed by an unsigned user, though no source is given. In "Manufacturing Processes II" (Tata McGraw-Hill Education) by H S Bawa, the following Equation is given on Page 95 for sizes over 500 mm:

I = 0.004 \cdot D %2B 2.1
T = k \cdot I
ITG IT5 IT6 ... IT17 IT18
k 7 10 ... 1600 2500

See also

References

  1. ^ ISO Standard 286 http://www.webstore.ansi.org/RecordDetail.aspx?sku=ISO+286-1%3a1988
  2. ^ Professor Sridhar Kota: ME 452 – Design for Manufacturability, course notes, University of Michigan.

External links