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Engineering tolerance
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==Considerations when setting tolerances== A primary concern is to determine how wide the tolerances may be without affecting other factors or the outcome of a process. This can be by the use of scientific principles, engineering knowledge, and professional experience. Experimental investigation is very useful to investigate the effects of tolerances: [[Design of experiments]], formal engineering evaluations, etc. A good set of engineering tolerances in a [[specification]], by itself, does not imply that compliance with those tolerances will be achieved. Actual production of any product (or operation of any system) involves some inherent variation of input and output. Measurement error and statistical uncertainty are also present in all measurements. With a [[normal distribution]], the tails of measured values may extend well beyond plus and minus three standard deviations from the process average. Appreciable portions of one (or both) tails might extend beyond the specified tolerance. The [[process capability]] of systems, materials, and products needs to be compatible with the specified engineering tolerances. [[Process control]]s must be in place and an effective [[quality management system]], such as [[Total Quality Management]], needs to keep actual production within the desired tolerances. A [[process capability index]] is used to indicate the relationship between tolerances and actual measured production. The choice of tolerances is also affected by the intended statistical [[sampling plan]] and its characteristics such as the Acceptable Quality Level. This relates to the question of whether tolerances must be extremely rigid (high confidence in 100% conformance) or whether some small percentage of being out-of-tolerance may sometimes be acceptable.
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