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GD &T Circularity

Circularity is a geometric dimensioning and tolerancing (GD&T) symbol that specifies how close a circular feature must be to a true circle. It controls the overall roundness of the feature by ensuring it is not too oblong, square, or out of round. Circularity tolerance zones are defined by two concentric circles, and the feature's surface points must all fall within this zone. Circularity is commonly used for rotating shafts, bearings, and other parts that require a perfectly round shape. It allows for looser diameter tolerances while still ensuring the feature is the proper circular form.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
225 views

GD &T Circularity

Circularity is a geometric dimensioning and tolerancing (GD&T) symbol that specifies how close a circular feature must be to a true circle. It controls the overall roundness of the feature by ensuring it is not too oblong, square, or out of round. Circularity tolerance zones are defined by two concentric circles, and the feature's surface points must all fall within this zone. Circularity is commonly used for rotating shafts, bearings, and other parts that require a perfectly round shape. It allows for looser diameter tolerances while still ensuring the feature is the proper circular form.

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rahul
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Circularity

GD&T Symbol:
Relative to Datum: No
MMC or LMC applicable: No
Drawing Callout:
Description:
The circularity symbol is used to describe how close an object should be to a true
circle. Sometimes called roundness, circularity is a 2-Dimensional tolerance that
controls the overall form of a circle ensuring it is not too oblong, square, or out of
round. Roundness is independent of any datum feature and only is always less than
the diameter dimensional tolerance of the part. Circularity essentially makes a cross-
section of a cylindrical or round feature and determines if the circle formed in that
cross-section is round.

GD&T Tolerance Zone:


Two concentric circles, one inner and one outer, in which all the points within the
circular surface must fall into. The tolerance zone lies on a plane that is
perpendicular to the central axis of the circular feature.

Gauging / Measurement:
Circularity is measured by constraining a part, rotating it around the central axis
while a height gauge records the variation of the surface. The height gauge must
have total variation less than the tolerance amount.

Relation to Other GD&T Symbols:


Circularity is the 2D version of cylindricity. While cylindricity ensures all the points on
a cylinder fall into a tolerance, circularity only is concerned with individual
measurements around the surface in one circle. If you think of a stack of coins,
circularity would be a measurement around one coin while cylindricity would have to
measure the entire stack. (cylindricity is actually a combination of circularity
and straightness)

When Used:
Circularity is a very common measurement and is uses in all forms of manufacturing.
Any time a part needs to be perfectly round such as a rotating shaft, or a bearing,
circularity is usually called out. You will see this GD&T symbol very often on
mechanical engineering drawings.

Example:
If you had a hole that was around a rotating shaft, Both pieces should be circular and
have a tight tolerance. Without circularity, the diameter of the hole and shaft would
have to be very tight and more expensive to make.

Example 1: Controlling circularity without GD&T Symbol


Example 2: Controlling both features with circularity allows the diameter tolerances
of the part to be opened up much larger.

Why isn’t the circularity 0.08 to replace ±0.08 of size tolerance?

You may be thinking, “well hang on – if it is ± 0.08 and circularity is the radial
distance between the two circles, wouldn’t that mean the circularity should be only
0.08 since it would be on both sides? No – and this is because of how the two-point
measurement of any feature would work when compared to the smallest size vs the
biggest size it could be. In GD&T there is a rule that states you need perfect form at
the MMC size – meaning at the largest size for a pin (smallest for a hole), your
shape of this round feature cannot let it outside of a size of 10.08 for the first
example.

Here is a diagram showing where the surface is allowed to lie without any circularity
added for a size tolerance of 20±0.5. As you can see the max size can cause the
shape of the part to go to 20.5 – just like you would assume. However due to the rule
in the GD&T standard – the LMC size – in this case, the smallest size tolerance, only
needs to be inspected with a two-point measurement. For an odd-number lobed part
– geometrically this means that the circularity is limited by the TOTAL size tolerance.
So for a size tolerance of 1.0 (±0.5), your equivalent circularity control would be 1.0.

We go into depth on this in our GD&T Fundamentals Course when we talk about
Rule #1 – the Envelope Principle and how it needs to be inspected.

To Recap – you need to be within a perfect boundary at MMC (largest pin, smallest
hole) but for the LMC (smallest pin, largest hole size) you only need to take a 2-point
measurement.
Final Notes:
Roundness:

Circularity in GD&T is sometimes also referred to as Roundness. Since it is a 2-


Dimensional tolerance sometimes multiple sections of the same feature must be
measured to ensure that the entire length of a feature is within roundness. Usually,
two or three measurements are taken to ensure the part meets roundness for each
segment of the part.

Statistical Tolerance Stacks:

Because circularity specifies the form of the surface in a specific area it needs to be
considered when calculating a statistical tolerance stack. For example, if you have a
part with a specified diameter and circularity callout, you must use both in your
statistical stack since the geometric tolerance can contribute to a large part envelope
than just the diameter tolerance alone. This will skew the statistical tolerance slightly
higher and should be considered since parts are rarely perfectly circular.

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