dicifa
Guest
Hello everyone, I have a huge doubt... .
upn or unp? What's the difference?
upn or unp? What's the difference?
Here's the question....in inventor the inner wings are inclined by 4.57° and since I have to predict internal heads I don't know what to do. .the uni 5680-73 defines them upn, that is normal profile (u recalls the shape while the inner faces of the wings are inclined by 8%). we always indicate them like that.
That's right.Here's the question....in inventor the inner wings are inclined by 4.57° and since I have to predict internal heads I don't know what to do. .
Sorry, I read 8th instead of 8%!That's right.
the slope indicates the tangent of the angle between the horizontal plane and the sloped plane, as a percentage. . .
therefore a slope of 8% means that the tangent of the corner is 0.08
to calculate the arctg angle 0.08 = 4.57°
I don't know what you mean.Do you know how to calculate 8% of tilt in degrees?
You have a cad in your hands... you don't need much for verification.
You're right, Mr. President, the Chinese are going to get us out of town.
I agree, it's just a "location" problem.I have always given a different interpretation to this "anomaly". . .
Italianized uni 5680-73 upn= u standard profile (normato)
international unp= u normal profile
on the outside in fact it is difficult to hear about upn, it is much more recurrent the wording unp
Unfortunately the unit, now, has to worry about "unifying us" towards Europe so, shortly, the new one will go into obsolescence.Hell, but if the unit, the national unifier agency says that one thing is called in a certain way, I don't see reason to do different.
we Italians must always complicate everything. if the norms do not count anything then it is worth ordering "the deft profile made of banana, but more sbile".
that then the supplier understands the same is all another stuff. I also have an old man who still orders iron "fe360", I know the type, interpreter. But I could also supply it with whipped cream, so much what it asks is a worthless theme.