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Understanding Tolerances & GD&T in Machining

A practical guide to linear tolerances, ISO fits, datums, feature control frames, and the GD&T symbols that control form, orientation, location, and runout.

Understanding Tolerances & GD&T in Machining

No machined part is ever exactly the size on the drawing — every dimension carries a permitted band of variation called a tolerance. Get tolerances right and parts assemble, seal, and rotate as intended; get them wrong and you either scrap good steel or accept loose, leaking, rattling assemblies. This guide explains linear tolerances, fits, and the GD&T (Geometric Dimensioning & Tolerancing) system that controls form, orientation, location, and runout — the language every serious workshop and inspector in the GCC must read fluently.

When a Riyadh fabrication shop quotes a shaft, the difference between ±0.1 mm and ±0.01 mm changes the machine, the tooling, the inspection, and the price. Tolerances are a cost lever as much as a quality one. For tight-tolerance turned parts, our precision turning & machining services work to drawing call-outs rather than guesswork.

Linear tolerances and fits

A linear tolerance is the simplest form: Ø25 +0.00 / −0.03 means the shaft may be 24.97–25.00 mm. When a shaft goes into a hole, the pairing is a fit, classified by the ISO 286 system:

Fit type Behaviour Typical use
Clearance fit Shaft always smaller than hole Sliding shafts, dowels you must remove
Transition fit May be slightly tight or loose Locating pins, gears keyed to shafts
Interference (press) fit Shaft larger than hole, forced in Bearings, bushings, permanent assembly

ISO uses codes like H7/g6 (hole basis) — capital letter = hole, lowercase = shaft, number = tolerance grade (lower = tighter). H7/g6 is a classic running clearance fit; H7/p6 a light press.

Why GD&T exists

Linear tolerances alone cannot describe a real part. A hole can be the right diameter yet in the wrong position; a face can be the right size yet not flat or not perpendicular. GD&T adds symbols that control geometry against datums (reference surfaces), so the drawing says exactly what matters functionally — and frees the machinist where it does not.

The GD&T characteristics

GD&T groups controls into families, each with a symbol placed in a feature control frame:

Category Controls Examples
Form Shape of a single feature Flatness, straightness, circularity, cylindricity
Orientation Angle to a datum Perpendicularity, parallelism, angularity
Location Position relative to datums Position (true position), concentricity, symmetry
Runout Wobble during rotation Circular runout, total runout
Profile Whole surface/line form Profile of a surface, profile of a line

The most-used callout in turned and milled work is Position — it defines a cylindrical tolerance zone for a hole's axis relative to datums, which is far more honest than two separate ±X/±Y dimensions.

Datums and the feature control frame

A datum is a theoretical reference (a plane, axis, or point) labelled A, B, C. The part is constrained in order: primary (A) seats first, secondary (B) orients, tertiary (C) locates. A feature control frame reads left to right: the symbol, the tolerance zone (with Ø if cylindrical), then the datums. For example, a position frame might call a 0.2 mm cylindrical zone referenced to A, B, C.

Material condition modifiers

  • MMC (Ⓜ, Maximum Material Condition) — the part has the most material (smallest hole / largest shaft). Calling MMC grants bonus tolerance as the feature departs from MMC, which is generous and cheaper to make for clearance holes.
  • LMC (Ⓛ) — least material; used for minimum wall or edge distance.
  • RFS — regardless of feature size; the strictest, no bonus.

Using MMC on bolt-clearance holes is a standard cost-saver: it lets parts that assemble fine pass inspection that a rigid ± would have rejected.

Practical workshop guidance

  1. Don't over-tolerance. Every halving of a tolerance band can multiply cost. Specify tight only where function demands it.
  2. Tie tolerances to function — sealing faces get flatness, rotating shafts get runout, mating bores get position.
  3. Define datums that match the assembly — reference the surfaces the part actually sits on in service.
  4. Check the drawing standard — ASME Y14.5 and ISO GPS differ in detail; know which the customer uses.

Conclusion

Tolerances decide whether parts fit; GD&T decides whether they function. Reading fits, datums, feature control frames, and material modifiers turns a drawing into clear, inspectable instructions — and prevents costly arguments over "in spec" parts that don't work. For components held to demanding GD&T call-outs, see our precision turning & machining services and the Industrial Knowledge Base.

FAQ

What's the difference between tolerance and GD&T? A tolerance is a permitted size variation; GD&T is a symbol-based system that additionally controls form, orientation, location, and runout against datums.

What does H7/g6 mean? It is an ISO fit: H7 is the hole tolerance, g6 the shaft tolerance, giving a small running clearance — common for sliding shafts and bushings.

Is tighter always better? No. Tighter tolerances cost more in machining and inspection. Specify tight only on features where it changes how the part works.

SKYLINE Engineering

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The engineering team at SKYLINE Industrial Solutions. We publish field-tested guides drawn from real KSA and GCC deployments.

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