Iso 8015 〈PLUS ✰〉

In 1985, the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) published a document that seemed, on its surface, dry as dust: .

But here’s the rub: That default only worked for features of size (holes, shafts). What about a flat surface? No default. What about the angle between two faces? No default. Every drawing was a minefield of unspoken agreements. Japanese suppliers assumed one set of defaults; German suppliers another. When a part arrived from Italy and failed assembly, the argument wasn’t about the part—it was about which standard applied .

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