Peter G. Shaw | 25/11/2010 15:29:41 |
![]() 1531 forum posts 44 photos | Ok, here's my take on them: Precision: that quality which determines whether or not a machine tool can cut to certain limits, or fineness. Accuracy: that quality which determines the absoluteness of the quantity, eg is it 23.456mm or 23.457mm. Should really be used with either absolute (for measurements which may be used elsewhere and hence should be related to a standard, or relative which implies that the actual value may not be correct when compared to a standard, but is in comparison with something else. Also very closely tied up with repeatability which refers to whether or not the same measurement or whatever can be repeated and be shown to have the same value each and every time. Quality: a very much abused word in my opinion. How often do you see something stated as being high quality, or, to put it another way, have you ever seen something stated as being low quality! I refer of course to advertising. Ok, I'll now stand back and await a caning! But no abusive language please. Regards, Peter G. Shaw |
NJH | 25/11/2010 16:33:43 |
![]() 2314 forum posts 139 photos | Tush Peter - and you an ex-BT man too!
I seem to recall Quality being defined as "Fit for purpose" however it's a while ago and I will go with your definitions for the time being. I guess this is another thread which could run and run.
Regards
Norman
|
oilcan | 25/11/2010 16:41:03 |
34 forum posts | precision=the tolerances to which i intend to machine.
accuracy = the size i actually machine.
quality = accuracy minus precision.
which is why i always claim that the axles i turn are not all different sizes but merely bespoke to there individual wheels. |
Martin W | 25/11/2010 17:03:42 |
940 forum posts 30 photos | Hi Oilcan
I can see the ground moving above the grave of Sir Joseph Whitworth as he turns at the word 'Bespoke'
![]() ![]() Cheers
Martin |
Nicholas Farr | 25/11/2010 20:05:19 |
![]() 3988 forum posts 1799 photos | Hi,
PRECISION; pertaining to being precise. i.e. High precistion = absolute minimum deviation from spceified value.
ACCURACY; the closest practical possible value to that specified. i.e. Plus/minus 0.001mm tolerance = Very accurate.
QUALITY; pertaining to an ideal charecteristic. i.e. Stone age engineering = probaly very low quality.
Thats my view of it.
Regards Nick.
Edited By Nicholas Farr on 25/11/2010 20:07:18 Edited By Nicholas Farr on 25/11/2010 20:08:34 |
Stub Mandrel | 25/11/2010 21:04:40 |
![]() 4318 forum posts 291 photos 1 articles | Precision is the degree to which a measurement is specified i.e. 0.010" is ten times a precise as 0.01", even though its the a same measurement. Accuracy is the range of variation of a measurement. 0.010" +/- 0.001" is more accurate than 0.010" +/- 0.002" Another way of looking at it is to think of target shooting. Get a goud grouping way off the bull and your shooting is precise, but not accurate. Get a spread of shots centred around the bull, your shog is accurate but not precise. Obviously to hit the bull with every shot you need both precision and accuracy to a suitable standard; do that and you have achived an appropriate level of quality. 'nuff said? Neil |
Nicholas Farr | 25/11/2010 22:32:14 |
![]() 3988 forum posts 1799 photos | Hi, Posted by Stub Mandrel on 25/11/2010 21:04:40
Another way of looking at it is to think of target shooting. Get a goud grouping way off the bull and your shooting is precise, but not accurate.
Not very precise if the specified target is the bull. I'd call it consistant.
I'll put it this way; accuracy is the tolerance of precision.
Regards Nick. |
John Olsen | 25/11/2010 22:44:03 |
1294 forum posts 108 photos 1 articles | Nick, You are a bit rough on the stone age guys, some of the things they built are still standing, which suggests that the quality was good. Some of the items were aligned to quite high precision too. There are stone structures built before metal tools were available where you cannot slip a knife blade into the gaps between the stones, so they were working to quite good accuracy too. I'd agree with Stub mandrel about the shooting, it is precise, but not accurate if they are all in the same wrong place. This implies a different sort of error to correct than if they are all over the place. regards John |
Nicholas Farr | 26/11/2010 00:28:42 |
![]() 3988 forum posts 1799 photos | Hi john, I'll take your point on the stone age guys. Probaly not a good comparison, but I don't think thier fashion would make it on the catwalk.
Some dictionary defenitions of precise: clearly expressed or delinated; distinct; definate; eactly corresponding to what is indecated; correct..... Or in other words not deviating from the specified target
Imagine two precision levels, one having a resolution of 0.1mm/10 and one of 0.001mm/10 but both claiming an accuracy of 1%. Thier accuracy would be the same but the precision will be much different.
Imagine the old English Longbow men one fires all his arrows precisely on the alliance with great accuracy. Bit of a job correcting that sort of error.
Regards Nick. Edited By Nicholas Farr on 26/11/2010 00:29:38 Edited By Nicholas Farr on 26/11/2010 00:37:01 |
Terryd | 26/11/2010 08:55:48 |
![]() 1946 forum posts 179 photos | Hi Michael, Getting into semantics is a dangerous place to go, it can be Tiger country! Unfortunately the English language itself is, by it's nature not very precise. It is this quality which, in many ways, makes it so useful and is one of the reasons it is more or less the lingua Franca of the internet. It is also the reason for a lot of argument especially on Forums like this. One of the reasons for this lack of precision is that many of the individual words have more than one meaning, and that attribute of the language is a major cause of differences of opinion. For example QUALITY has two meanings and is also subjective, in the first definition it means an attribute. We say that individual metals have different qualities. This does not imply that one is intrinsically better than another. Steel has certain qualities that make it useful in a very wide range of applications while brass is better for others. However a second meaning of quality is how good something is in comparison with similar. My quality of life is probably better than someone similar 150 years ago. A Ford Focus is arguably of better quality than a Ford Anglia, while it would be unfair to compare the Focus with a Bentley. PRECISION also has at least two definitions, but this time more objective. In the first definition, precision implies accuracy, and that accuracy is a quality (attribute) of precision in this meaning. I can make a one off model which is very precise, in this context. The second meaning is of repeatability, as in production engineering. in colloquial terms we say, for example, that 'all of those mobile phones are made precisely the same'. ACCURACY, on the other hand is less ambiguous. It is the degree of closeness to which a target or goal can be achieved. Be that target a dimension or the bullseye of an archery target. We can say of a darts player that his first arrow was precisely on target when he hits the treble 20 he wants. when he gets the other two in the bed we say that he threw his darts with precision. As I said Accuracy is a quality (attribute) of precision. As I said, Semantics is a dangerous practice and is not very accurate at times ![]() Terry |
Hugh Gilhespie | 26/11/2010 09:17:58 |
130 forum posts 45 photos | Just my tuppence worth.
One thing that hasn't been mentioned so far is repeatability. For us amateurs, this is often more important than accuracy. For instance, if we are turning a taper to fit a cone socket, we don't really care if its 9 degrees or 10 degrees but by using the same set up to cut both we do get accurate repeatabilty and hopefully a good fit.
A lot of the cheaper measuring devices have a precision greater than their inherent accuracy, the digital angle gauge I use claims an accuracy of 0.2 degrees but reads to 0.1 degrees. However, provided its repeatability is at least as good as its precision this doesn't matter as our normal type of measurment is a comparison, not an absolute measurement.
Regards
Hugh |
Gordon W | 26/11/2010 10:03:58 |
2011 forum posts | I like the old meaning of "nice". Hate the modern meaning. |
blowlamp | 27/11/2010 11:45:56 |
![]() 1885 forum posts 111 photos |
Do you feel the question has been asked with sufficient PRECISION to allow me to provide an answer of acceptable ACCURACY that would be of a suitable QUALITY? ![]() Edited By blowlamp on 27/11/2010 11:47:47 |
KWIL | 27/11/2010 12:06:40 |
3681 forum posts 70 photos | I am with Terryd, Quality use of the language, precise in its construction and accurate in its spelling, what more could you ask for? |
Steve Garnett | 27/11/2010 14:30:41 |
837 forum posts 27 photos | Posted by MICHAEL WILLIAMS on 27/11/2010 11:09:13: To get back to business - what I really want to get at is whether ' Quality ' is something that can actually be defined or whether it will always be a subjective property . All the time it is being defined by subjective terms it will remain subjective, won't it? Every time something is built to a defined standard that takes care of the technical aspects of its construction, you could say that it met that quality standard - as far as it's defined. But most if not all of these standards don't include any subjective guidelines, even - for the simple reason that it's personal. It has been observed before that good engineering has a beauty of its own - and that is very hard to define in 'quality' terms. I suppose it could be argued that the Chinese may have taken advantage of this in the past to produce machines that look very much like quality engineering... So you could say that quality in engineering terms can at least in part be defined, but whether this would ever amount to a 'holistic' and absolute definition - well I rather doubt it. You could take almost any two items, and build one like a brick outhouse, out of well-chosen materials, etc, to an accuracy specification blah blah, etc and give it an excellent paint job, and many people would say 'yes, that's a quality piece of engineering'. Alternatively, you could analyse exactly what was actually required of the item, and design a construction that met all of the specification using rather less material, didn't look as good because you didn't paint it, but technically might out-perform the brick outhouse version. They're both 'quality' - but which approach is 'best'? |
Terryd | 27/11/2010 14:57:27 |
![]() 1946 forum posts 179 photos | Thanks Kwil.... I think ![]() regards Terry |
Chris Trice | 27/11/2010 19:24:58 |
![]() 1376 forum posts 10 photos | Precision and accuracy are very similar but I'd class precision as meaning how fine a tolerance the machine is capable of as far as finishing a workpiece to size using any means whereas accuracy pertains more to how much you can rely on the dials to place any tooling in a position that meets your desired level of precision as a result of the standard to which the machine has been manufactured. Quality used to suggest that something was made to a high standard but the word doesn't mean anything nowadays without an adjective in front of it. |
Stub Mandrel | 30/11/2010 21:57:17 |
![]() 4318 forum posts 291 photos 1 articles | My scientific, rather than engineering training is quite clear. Precision is the degree to which a quantity is defined or measured - the number of digits after the decimal point, so to speak. It says nothing of accuracy, which is (for example) how closely the mean of a series of results approaches the true figure. Opens some very interesting ideas. If you measure enough peoples' height to the nearest inch, you can get an idea of average hight to a precision of a fraction of an inch. But to get the most accurate result you need to add random error (dither) to the measurements! Neil |
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