4.2 Mechanical CAD Package and Drawings
A perfect 3D model does not guarantee a perfect physical part. Manufacturing partners cannot functionally inspect a physical piece of plastic or metal against a digital
The Deliverable Hierarchy
Section titled “The Deliverable Hierarchy”The “Master” source of truth must be defined immediately to prevent arguments between the 3D geometry and the 2D print.
Standard Rule: The 2D Drawing controls the Tolerances, Material, Finish, and Critical Dimensions. The 3D Model controls only the basic geometry and CNC tool paths.
The Golden Data Pack must contain:
- Native 3D Files (e.g., SLDPRT, PRT): Required for tool designers to analyze draft angles and electrode design for injection molding.
- Neutral 3D Files (STEP AP214): Required for universal viewing and CAM systems. AP214 (not AP203) must be used to preserve the assembly hierarchy and color coding.
- 2D Fabrication Drawings (PDF + DXF): The absolute inspection master.
- Assembly Drawings: Exploded views showing the exact build order.
2D Drawing Requirements: The “No-Interpretation” Rule
Section titled “2D Drawing Requirements: The “No-Interpretation” Rule”Drawings must be mathematically explicit. A drawing that relies on the machinist or molder “figuring it out” or “using common sense” constitutes an incomplete specification.
1. Materials and Finish
Section titled “1. Materials and Finish”Using generic material descriptors is prohibited.
- Bad: “Material: ABS”, “Finish: Textured Black”.
- Good: “Material: ABS, LG Chem HF380”, “Finish: MT-11010”, “Color: Pantone Black 6C”.
- Logic: Different grades of ABS have different physical shrinkage rates during cooling (e.g., 0.5% vs 0.8%). Approving the wrong resin grade will yield a part that is out of tolerance, even if the steel tool is cut perfectly.
2. Tolerances and Critical-to-Quality (CTQ) Dimensions
Section titled “2. Tolerances and Critical-to-Quality (CTQ) Dimensions”Every dimension needs a tolerance. A standard block (e.g., ISO 2768-m) must be used for general features, but the critical mating fits must be explicitly toleranced.
- When the feature mates with another part, an explicit tight tolerance (e.g., ± 0.05 mm) must be applied and marked as CTQ.
- When the feature is cosmetic or free-space, standard open tolerances must be applied to save machining cost.
3. Cosmetic Zones (A/B/C Classification)
Section titled “3. Cosmetic Zones (A/B/C Classification)”Visual acceptance criteria must be defined directly on the drawing to prevent subjective arguments during Quality Control (QC).
- Zone A (Primary User Face): Zero scratches, specs, or sinks allowed.
- Zone B (Side/Back): Minor defects allowed if < 0.5 mm².
- Zone C (Internal/Bottom/Hidden): Flow lines, ejector pin marks, and flash allowed up to a specified mechanical limit.
Pro-Tip: “Ejector Pin Regret” zones must always be explicitly defined. If the toolmaker is not explicitly told where to put the ejector pins, they may place them on primary cosmetic surfaces because it is mechanically optimal for pushing the plastic out of the mold.
The Virtual Fit Check (Interference Audit)
Section titled “The Virtual Fit Check (Interference Audit)”Before freezing the NPI gate, an assembly interference check must be performed. Expensive ECOs (Engineering Change Orders) frequently occur because a connector fails to align with a housing hole, necessitating expensive tool modifications.
The Validation Protocol:
Section titled “The Validation Protocol:”- Static Interference: The CAD tool’s “Interference Detection” must be executed. Zero overlap is permitted between solid bodies (exception: deliberately designed press-fit ribs).
- Connector Alignment: USB, HDMI, and Power connectors on the PCBA must be verified to center exactly within the enclosure cutouts.
- Rule: The cutout must be larger than the connector + the stack-up tolerance of the PCBA mounting holes + the connector’s own manufacturing float.
- Assembly Stack-up: All screws must be verified to be long enough to properly engage the threads, but short enough that they do not bottom out or pierce the other side of the plastic.
- Component Headroom: The tallest component on the PCBA (usually electrolytic capacitors or large inductors) must be checked against the enclosure ceiling and internal mechanical ribs.
Assembly Datums and Exploded Views
Section titled “Assembly Datums and Exploded Views”For the Assembly Instructions (MBOM context), drawings must be provided that guide the operator linearly and logically.
- Exploded Views: Every screw, washer, and adhesive liner must be shown in the exact sequential order of operation.
- Orientation Callouts: If a part is symmetrical but functionally directional (e.g., a cooling fan or a sealing gasket), a physical “poka-yoke” feature (like a notch) must be added or a prominent label must be placed on the drawing: “INSTALL WITH NOTCH FACING UP”.
Final Checkout: Mechanical CAD package and drawings
Section titled “Final Checkout: Mechanical CAD package and drawings”| Check | Criterion | Critical Threshold / Requirement |
|---|---|---|
| Data Integrity | Are Native + STEP files provided? | They must match exactly. STEP AP214 is required. |
| Material definition | Is the specific resin grade defined? | Manufacturer + Grade (e.g., Sabic C2950). |
| Cosmetics | Are Zones A/B/C defined? | A visual inspection map must be included on the drawing. |
| Fit Check | Has an Interference Report been run? | Must Pass. Zero collisions between the PCBA and the Enclosure. |
| Tolerances | Are CTQ dimensions marked? | Critical mating features must have tight, explicit tolerances (± 0.05 – 0.1 mm). |
| Are Ejector/Gate locations defined? | ”Prohibited Zones” must be marked for gate and pin placement. | |
| Assembly clarity | Is there an Exploded View? | All parts must be visible; no “hidden” or assumed installation steps. |