{"id":7885,"date":"2026-07-03T10:00:00","date_gmt":"2026-07-03T02:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/?p=7885"},"modified":"2026-07-03T23:12:48","modified_gmt":"2026-07-03T15:12:48","slug":"multi-shaft-blade-tolerance-stacking-gdt-controls","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/multi-shaft-blade-tolerance-stacking-gdt-controls\/","title":{"rendered":"\ub2e4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub098\uc774\ud504\uc758 \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28: GD&amp;T \uad00\ub9ac, \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c \uc120\ud0dd \uc870\ub9bd(Selective Fit) \ubc0f \uc870\ub9bd \ud6c4 TIR \uac80\uc99d\u3002"},"content":{"rendered":"<figure class=\"wp-block-image size-full\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"1024\" src=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-7886\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6.jpeg 1024w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6-300x300.jpeg 300w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6-150x150.jpeg 150w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6-768x768.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6-12x12.jpeg 12w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6-600x600.jpeg 600w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-6-100x100.jpeg 100w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure><blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p><strong>\ud575\uc2ec \uc694\uc57d<\/strong>\ub2e4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354\uc5d0\uc11c \ub098\uc774\ud504 \ub450\uaed8, \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c \ub450\uaed8, \ub2e8\uba74 \ud3c9\uba74\ub3c4, \uc9c1\uac01\ub3c4, \ubcf4\uc5b4\/\ucd95 \ud615\uc0c1\uc758 \ubbf8\uc138\ud55c \uc624\ucc28\ub294 \ubbf8\uc138\ud55c \uc218\uc900\uc73c\ub85c \ub05d\ub098\uc9c0 \uc54a\uc2b5\ub2c8\ub2e4. \uc774\ub7ec\ud55c \uc624\ucc28\ub4e4\uc740 \ucd95\uc758 \uae30\uc6b8\uc5b4\uc9d0\uacfc \ucd1d\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc(TIR)\uc73c\ub85c \ub204\uc801\ub418\uc5b4, \uac04\uaca9 \ub4dc\ub9ac\ud504\ud2b8, \ubd88\uade0\uc77c\ud55c \ud558\uc911, \uc9c4\ub3d9, \ub098\uc774\ud504 \uc218\uba85 \ub2e8\ucd95 \ub4f1\uc758 \uacb0\uacfc\ub85c \ub098\ud0c0\ub0a9\ub2c8\ub2e4. \ubcf8 \uac00\uc774\ub4dc\ub294 \ub3c4\uba74\uc5d0 \uc989\uc2dc \ubc18\uc601\ud558\uace0 \uac80\uc218 \uc2dc \uac15\uc81c\ud560 \uc218 \uc788\ub294 \uc2e4\ubb34\uc801\uc778 GD&amp;T(\uae30\ud558\uacf5\ucc28) \ubaa9\ud45c\uce58, \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c \uc120\ud0dd \uc870\ub9bd \uc804\ub7b5, \uc870\ub9bd\/QA \uccb4\ud06c\ub9ac\uc2a4\ud2b8, \uadf8\ub9ac\uace0 \uc2ec\ud50c\ud55c \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28 \uc0b0\ucd9c\ubc95\uc744 \uc81c\uc2dc\ud569\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p><\/blockquote><p>\ub2e4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub098\uc774\ud504\ub97c \uc124\uacc4\ud558\uac70\ub098 \uc720\uc9c0\ubcf4\uc218\ud560 \ub54c \ubc1c\uc0dd\ud558\ub294 \ub300\ubd80\ubd84\uc758 '\uc6d0\uc778 \ubd88\uba85' \ubb38\uc81c(\ubd84\uc1c4 \uc785\ub3c4 \uc694\ub3d9, \uc804\ub958 \ud53c\ud06c \ubc1c\uc0dd, \uac11\uc791\uc2a4\ub7ec\uc6b4 \ub9c8\ubaa8)\ub294 \uc7ac\uc9c8\ubfd0\ub9cc \uc544\ub2c8\ub77c \ub098\uc774\ud504\uc758 '\uc870\ub9bd \uc801\uce35 \uae30\ud558\uad6c\uc870(Stack geometry)'\uc5d0\uc11c \ube44\ub86f\ub429\ub2c8\ub2e4. \uc2e4\ubb34\uc5d0\uc11c\ub294 \ub3c4\uba74, \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c \ubc30\uce58 \uacc4\ud68d, \uac80\uc218 \uae30\ub85d\uc774 \uac15\uc7ac(Steel)\uc758 \ud488\uc9c8\ub9cc\ud07c\uc774\ub098 \uc911\uc694\ud569\ub2c8\ub2e4.<\/p><p>For reference on the knife category this article discusses (materials, heat treatment considerations, and failure modes), see the background on&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/%ec%a0%9c%ed%92%88\/%eb%b6%84%ec%87%84%ea%b8%b0-%ec%b9%bc%eb%82%a0\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em><strong>Maxtor Metal<\/strong><\/em><\/a>\u2014then come back here to focus on the&nbsp;<strong>shredder blade stack-up<\/strong>&nbsp;and GD&amp;T controls.<\/p><ul><li>Why multi-shaft blade tolerance stacking matters for uptime, particle size, and $\/ton<\/li>\n\n<li>How cumulative errors create angular tilt, uneven load, vibration, and premature wear<\/li>\n\n<li>What this guide delivers: GD&amp;T targets, spacer strategy, assembly\/QA SOPs, and ROI<\/li><\/ul><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"82c3418f-1ec2-49c1-b609-761f0f3256f2\">\ud604\uc7a5 \ud30c\uc190 \ubc0f \ubd88\ub7c9 \uc2e0\ud638 (Field failure signals)<\/h2><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"cb1b827d-ec25-419e-9eca-44b7583b873a\">Throughput, energy, and particle-size drift<\/h3><p>In a healthy multi-shaft stack, each cutter shares load in a repeatable way, and the interlocking gap stays stable across the working width.<\/p><p>When the stack starts to \u201cwalk\u201d dimensionally, the first signal is usually subtle: throughput becomes harder to hold, kWh\/ton creeps up, and output particle size spreads. Operators compensate by changing screen, feed rate, or reversing behavior\u2014but the underlying issue is often geometric.<\/p><p>Why geometry shows up as energy and size drift: if certain knives contact earlier (because the stack is tilted), those edges do more work per revolution. That creates localized heating and faster edge rounding. As edges round unevenly, the shredder shifts from shearing to tearing in parts of the stack, which increases energy and worsens size control.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"fd7b53c8-0a0b-4f9d-b7fb-3ff053742ae5\">Vibration, noise, and current spikes at load<\/h3><p>Vibration that increases with load (not just speed) is a classic sign of uneven contact and cyclic loading.<\/p><p>When stacked faces aren\u2019t flat\/parallel, the assembly effectively becomes a shallow cone. Under clamp load it may look \u201cseated,\u201d but under cutting load it rocks microscopically. That rocking translates into oscillating torque demand, which you see as current spikes.<\/p><p>If you\u2019re doing condition monitoring: look for vibration that correlates with cutting events and a repeatable \u201csignature\u201d that grows after knife rotations or maintenance cycles. It often points to the stack geometry changing, not bearings failing first.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"127961a5-9466-4d9d-a3e2-e733501c2655\">Edge quality, premature wear, and interlocking-gap instability<\/h3><p>Three practical symptoms show up together:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Edge quality changes<\/strong>: rounded edges in one axial region while another region still looks sharp.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Premature wear patterns<\/strong>: polishing\/fretting bands on spacer faces or knife sides, indicating micro-slip.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Gap instability<\/strong>: measured interlocking clearance varies around the rotation, or varies by axial position.<\/li><\/ul><p>If you can measure the interlocking gap at multiple angular positions and it varies, you\u2019re usually looking at a runout\/tilt problem. If it varies by axial position, you\u2019re often looking at cumulative thickness and face-orientation variation.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"fb6e0460-1f4d-4144-bd07-f57168d81381\">\ubc1c\uc0dd \uba54\ucee4\ub2c8\uc998 \ubc0f GD&amp;T(\uae30\ud558\uacf5\ucc28) \ubaa9\ud45c\uce58<\/h2><div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-full is-resized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"800\" height=\"800\" src=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511.jpg\" alt=\"Mechanism and GD&amp;T targets\" class=\"wp-image-4885\" style=\"aspect-ratio:1;object-fit:cover;width:658px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511.jpg 800w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511-768x768.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511-12x12.jpg 12w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511-600x600.jpg 600w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades511-100x100.jpg 100w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\" \/><\/figure><\/div><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"97775621-2326-440f-b067-25b292dd3957\">How cumulative variation skews full shafts<\/h3><p>A multi-shaft stack behaves like a long \u201cbeam\u201d of alternating blades and spacers.<\/p><p>Each interface introduces potential angular error:<\/p><ul><li>blade face flatness error<\/li>\n\n<li>spacer face flatness error<\/li>\n\n<li>lack of parallelism between the two faces of a blade or spacer<\/li>\n\n<li>lack of perpendicularity between a face and the bore\/shaft datum axis<\/li>\n\n<li>bore positional\/roundness issues (often hidden as \u201cit fits\u201d)<\/li><\/ul><p>Even if each part is \u201cwithin print,\u201d the&nbsp;<em>direction<\/em>&nbsp;of those errors matters. If many parts bias the same way, you can create measurable tilt and a large end-to-end face runout.<\/p><p>A useful mental model: each element contributes a small wedge angle. Over 20\u201330 elements, those wedge angles can align and create a meaningful slope. That slope shifts where knives touch, changes the interlocking gap, and can push load into one side of the cutters and into bearings.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"669178d9-b0ae-4434-8c2b-83aaa0166295\">Callouts to control it: flatness, parallelism, perpendicularity, runout<\/h3><p>GD&amp;T is the cleanest way to express what you\u2019re actually trying to control:&nbsp;<em>seating<\/em>,&nbsp;<em>orientation to a datum axis<\/em>, \uadf8\ub9ac\uace0&nbsp;<em>assembled wobble<\/em>.<\/p><p>For definitions and symbol rules, the two authoritative references are the U.S. standard&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.asme.org\/codes-standards\/find-codes-standards\/y14-5-dimensioning-tolerancing\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em><strong>ASME Y14.5 Dimensioning and Tolerancing<\/strong><\/em><\/a>&nbsp;and the ISO GPS standard&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/www.iso.org\/standard\/59912.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em><strong>ISO 1101: Geometrical tolerancing<\/strong><\/em><\/a>.<\/p><p>Here are&nbsp;<strong>practical starting targets<\/strong>&nbsp;many shops can hold with grinding\/lapping and capable inspection. These ranges are calibrated against typical interlocking gap requirements of 1.5\u20133.0 mm at rotor OD of 300\u2013400 mm across a 20\u201330 element stack; tighter gap targets or longer stacks require proportionally tighter controls. Treat them as engineering starting points to validate against your specific design and measurement capability.<\/p><div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-large\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"683\" src=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7-1024x683.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-7887\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7-1024x683.jpeg 1024w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7-300x200.jpeg 300w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7-768x512.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7-18x12.jpeg 18w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7-600x400.jpeg 600w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-7.jpeg 1536w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure><\/div><p><strong>How to apply these callouts (what to put on the drawing):<\/strong><\/p><ul><li><strong>Flatness on spacer and blade seating faces<\/strong>&nbsp;controls how repeatably each layer contacts under clamp load.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Parallelism between opposite faces (within a spacer or blade)<\/strong>&nbsp;controls wedge angle\u2014the hidden driver of tilt.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Perpendicularity of seating faces to the datum axis (bore\/shaft)<\/strong>&nbsp;controls face squareness to rotation.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Total runout of critical OD\/ID surfaces relative to datum axis<\/strong>&nbsp;controls the assembled \u201cwobble\u201d that becomes gap variation around the rotation.<\/li><\/ul><p>If you\u2019re building a drawing package,&nbsp;<strong>GD&amp;T runout control<\/strong>&nbsp;is what turns these requirements into an inspectionable acceptance gate: you can measure it after assembly and stop bad stacks before they go into service.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"21f8d02b-0fc9-48ce-a37d-dbe1f9a8a2b6\">Surface finish and datums for stable stacks<\/h3><p>Once geometry is controlled, surface finish determines whether the stack stays put\u2014or creeps.<\/p><p>Practical guidance:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Seat on controlled datums<\/strong>. Don\u2019t leave the datum scheme ambiguous. Choose a bore\/shaft datum axis and define which face is primary seating datum.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Avoid mixed datum logic<\/strong>&nbsp;(e.g., some features referenced to OD, others to bore) unless you have a manufacturing reason and you can verify coaxiality\/runout.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Specify surface finish on mating faces<\/strong>&nbsp;to reduce embedment and micro-slip. Rough faces \u201cbed in\u201d under torque and temperature cycling, changing preload and tilt.<\/li><\/ul><p>If you\u2019re seeing fretting: it\u2019s often a sign of micro-motion from wedge angle + insufficient friction stability. Solve the geometry first; then tune finish and clamping.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"2c1a9b87-18e6-4726-9f2d-05bce49038ad\">\uc815\ubc00 \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c \ubc0f \uc120\ud0dd \uc870\ub9bd(Selective Fit)<\/h2><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"d465c9f6-e3cb-4288-8b4e-871869348d09\">Thickness grading in 0.01\u20130.02 mm bands<\/h3><p>If your stack is 20\u201330 elements, treating spacers as \u201call the same\u201d is where the tolerance stack becomes unavoidable.<\/p><p>A pragmatic approach is&nbsp;<strong>spacer thickness grading<\/strong>:<\/p><ul><li>Inspect each spacer thickness with a known method (mic, bench comparator, or CMM depending on tolerance).<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Bin<\/strong>&nbsp;spacers into tight bands (0.01\u20130.02 mm increments).<\/li>\n\n<li>Build matched sets that alternate high\/low thickness to cancel bias.<\/li><\/ul><p>This doesn\u2019t magically remove variation, but it prevents a worst-case scenario where all thick parts end up on one side of a stack and create a step change in gap.<\/p><div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"1024\" src=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8.jpeg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-7888\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8.jpeg 1024w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8-300x300.jpeg 300w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8-150x150.jpeg 150w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8-768x768.jpeg 768w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8-12x12.jpeg 12w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8-600x600.jpeg 600w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/06\/image-8-100x100.jpeg 100w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure><\/div><p>What \u201cgood\u201d looks like in practice:<\/p><ul><li>you can assemble multiple stacks from the same batch and see similar post-assembly TIR<\/li>\n\n<li>gap checks repeat after reassembly (same parts, same order)<\/li>\n\n<li>the stack does not \u201csettle\u201d into a new geometry after the first hours of operation<\/li><\/ul><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"fefe1fd2-a54f-41b5-b9b3-eb439c82dbd3\">Matched\/lapped faces and material\/HT choices<\/h3><p>Selective fit works best when faces behave predictably under clamp load.<\/p><p>Controls that matter:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Matched faces<\/strong>: lapping or fine grinding to improve flatness and reduce embedment<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Material stability<\/strong>: choose spacer materials and heat treatment that resist creep at operating temperature<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Hardness balance<\/strong>: if spacers are much softer than knives, they become the sacrificial \u201csettling layer,\u201d changing preload and geometry<\/li><\/ul><p>Where operations often get burned is inconsistent heat treat or residual stress relief, especially when spacers are thin. A thin ring that moves 0.01 mm after stress relief can erase your whole inspection effort.<\/p><p>In programs Maxtor Metal has supported, matched-face components were supplied with full QC packs \u2014 covering material certificates, dimensional inspection reports, and traceability records \u2014 giving procurement teams a closed traceability loop across multiple lots. The point isn&#8217;t the supplier; it&#8217;s that the documentation structure matters: without traceable QC records per lot, you can&#8217;t prove the tolerance chain held across builds.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"281899d3-04a1-46bb-9668-3d1e07e92a9a\">\uc870\ub9bd \uacf5\uc815 \ubc0f QA(\ud488\uc9c8 \ubcf4\uc99d) \uad00\ub9ac<\/h2><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"a8c6cf71-4957-4bdf-8ccd-9d7d1291aa56\">Torque\/clamping sequence to avoid elastic tilt<\/h3><p>Even with perfect parts, you can assemble tilt into the stack.<\/p><p>Common ways this happens:<\/p><ul><li>tightening one end fully before the stack is uniformly seated<\/li>\n\n<li>clamping over contamination (chips, burrs, oil film inconsistencies)<\/li>\n\n<li>tightening against a face that is not perpendicular to the datum axis<\/li><\/ul><p>Practical controls:<\/p><ol><li><strong>Clean and verify<\/strong>: wipe faces; stone burrs; verify no raised edges.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Stage torque<\/strong>: bring clamp load up in increments (e.g., 30% \u2192 60% \u2192 100%) with a repeatable sequence.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Rotate and re-seat<\/strong>: after initial torque, rotate the assembly and re-check seat contact if your design allows.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Record torque + tool<\/strong>: torque wrench ID\/calibration status matters if you\u2019re chasing repeatability.<\/li><\/ol><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"e531698b-2c6d-48c6-97ee-f5efdf9b54c9\">Post-assembly TIR\/runout checks and acceptance limits<\/h3><p>A decision-stage SOP needs a hard \u201cgo\/no-go\u201d gate.<\/p><p>What to check:<\/p><ul><li><strong>OD TIR near the cutting zone<\/strong>&nbsp;(a functional diameter that represents where the knives actually work)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>stack end-face axial runout<\/strong>&nbsp;at an accessible outer spacer\/end face<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>stack height \/ end-to-end dimension<\/strong>&nbsp;to confirm the axial build matches the intended working width<\/li><\/ul><p>A practical, repeatable setup used in many shops:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Fixture<\/strong>: a clean&nbsp;<strong>master shaft<\/strong>&nbsp;supported on&nbsp;<strong>V-blocks<\/strong>&nbsp;(or an equivalent datum-consistent setup)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Indicator resolution<\/strong>: choose an indicator you can trust at the tolerance you\u2019re trying to control (for tight stacks, a&nbsp;<strong>0.001 mm dial indicator<\/strong>&nbsp;is common). For CMM-based verification of individual components before assembly, the acceptance and reverification test framework is defined in <a href=\"https:\/\/www.iso.org\/standard\/40954.html\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em><strong>ISO 10360-2<\/strong><\/em><\/a>&nbsp;\u2014 the same standard referenced in incoming inspection workflows.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Measurement locations (examples)<\/strong>:<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Point A \u2014 knife OD<\/strong>: measure OD TIR at the knife outside diameter, about&nbsp;<strong>~5 mm from the knife face<\/strong>&nbsp;(close to the functional region)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Point B \u2014 stack end face<\/strong>: measure axial runout on the&nbsp;<strong>outer spacer\/end face<\/strong><\/li><\/ul><p>Recommended sequence (reduce clamp-induced error and catch problems early):<\/p><ol><li><strong>Clean and verify<\/strong>: wipe the shaft and faces; solvent-clean; remove burrs; confirm the shaft shoulder seats cleanly.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Build with light preload<\/strong>: install components and apply a light preload.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Rotate and check early<\/strong>: rotate the shaft and measure OD TIR before full torque.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Stage torque<\/strong>: tighten in controlled steps (e.g.,&nbsp;<strong>30% \u2192 60% \u2192 100%<\/strong>) with a repeatable pattern.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Re-check after final torque<\/strong>: measure OD TIR and end-face runout again.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>In-process checks for long stacks<\/strong>: consider a rule like&nbsp;<strong>\u201ccheck local TIR after every 5 knives\u201d<\/strong>&nbsp;to prevent compounding an error that only shows up at the end.<\/li><\/ol><p>Acceptance limits depend on shredder size and gap requirements, but the key is&nbsp;<em>\uc77c\uad00\uc131<\/em>:<\/p><ul><li>pick one or two measurement points that correlate with gap stability<\/li>\n\n<li>measure the same way every time (same datum setup, same indicator resolution, same rotation method)<\/li>\n\n<li>capture the value in a traceable recordFor the incoming-inspection side of the same documentation workflow \u2014 covering CMM sampling plans, EN 10204 MTR validation, and lot dossier structure \u2014 see&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/aftermarket-shredder-knives-procurement-spec-cmm-mtr\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em><strong>Aftermarket Shredder Knives Procurement: The Audit-Ready Checklist<\/strong><\/em><\/a>.<\/li><\/ul><p>Suggested record fields (what makes troubleshooting possible later):<\/p><ul><li>date\/time, ambient temperature (if relevant)<\/li>\n\n<li>stack ID, knife\/spacer lot IDs,&nbsp;<strong>as-assembled order<\/strong><\/li>\n\n<li>fixture\/datum method (e.g., master shaft + V-block)<\/li>\n\n<li>indicator type and resolution, instrument ID\/calibration status<\/li>\n\n<li>staged torque values + tool ID<\/li>\n\n<li>OD TIR at Point A (max\/min) and end-face runout at Point B<\/li>\n\n<li>pass\/fail decision + rework notes<\/li><\/ul><p>If you don\u2019t already have a measurement method, align it to your drawing standard (ASME Y14.5 or ISO 1101) so inspection and engineering are speaking the same language.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"d7aa8740-d79b-45e0-aad4-fc73916a38ab\">Shaft straightness, bearing alignment, and traceability data<\/h3><p>Stack control fails if the shaft\/bearing system is not straight and aligned.<\/p><p>Practical checks:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Shaft straightness<\/strong>&nbsp;verification before assembly (especially after overload events)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Bearing alignment<\/strong>&nbsp;checks during rebuilds (housing faces, bore alignment)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Traceability<\/strong>&nbsp;of blade\/spacer lots and assembly order<\/li><\/ul><p>A simple improvement that pays back fast: record the&nbsp;<em>as-assembled stack order<\/em>&nbsp;(part IDs or batch IDs) alongside the runout result. When a field failure happens, you can see whether the issue repeats with a specific lot, a specific stack order, or a specific assembly team.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"c3db2961-97f4-4a7c-aace-0bcc354eaf8e\">\uc5d4\uc9c0\ub2c8\uc5b4\ub4e4\uc774 \uc0ac\uc6a9\ud558\ub294 \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28(Stack-up) \uacc4\uc0b0 \uacf5\uc2dd<\/h2><div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-full is-resized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"800\" height=\"800\" src=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111.jpg\" alt=\"\uc5d4\uc9c0\ub2c8\uc5b4\ub4e4\uc774 \uc0ac\uc6a9\ud558\ub294 \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28(Stack-up) \uacc4\uc0b0 \uacf5\uc2dd\" class=\"wp-image-4887\" style=\"aspect-ratio:1.3333333333333333;object-fit:cover;width:644px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111.jpg 800w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111-768x768.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111-12x12.jpg 12w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111-600x600.jpg 600w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/10\/Shredder-blades2111-100x100.jpg 100w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 800px) 100vw, 800px\" \/><\/figure><\/div><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"0e1beec3-0d2e-459f-b186-e72332e21685\">Worst-case vs. RSS for multi-shaft blade stacks<\/h3><p>Two math models show up in tolerance work:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Worst-case stack-up<\/strong>: assume every tolerance hits its worst direction at the same time. This is conservative and can force expensive tolerances, but it\u2019s useful when failure is unacceptable.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>RSS (Root Sum Square)<\/strong>: assumes independent variation and combines tolerances statistically. This often matches reality better when processes are stable.<\/li><\/ul><p>For an authoritative reference that discusses worst-case vs. statistical (including RSS) tolerance analysis, see NIST\u2019s&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/nvlpubs.nist.gov\/nistpubs\/Legacy\/IR\/nistir6524.pdf\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><strong><em>NIST IR 6524,&nbsp;Information Models for Design Tolerancing&nbsp;(2000)<\/em><\/strong><\/a>.<\/p><p>For shredder stacks, use worst-case thinking to identify what can catastrophically break gap control, and RSS thinking to set realistic process capability targets. For measurement uncertainty quantification that underpins guard band decisions, see<a href=\"https:\/\/www.bipm.org\/en\/committees\/jc\/jcgm\/publications\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\"><em>&nbsp;<strong>JCGM 100:2008 (GUM) \u2014 Guide to the Expression of Uncertainty in Measurement<\/strong><\/em><\/a>, published by the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"ae69e996-e367-4955-bc25-f5b86a3b086d\">Building a tolerance chain for blades, spacers, and bores<\/h3><p>A workable tolerance chain for a blade stack should include more than \u201cthickness.\u201d At minimum, track:<\/p><ul><li>blade thickness tolerance (size)<\/li>\n\n<li>spacer thickness tolerance (size)<\/li>\n\n<li>face parallelism within each component (orientation)<\/li>\n\n<li>face perpendicularity to datum axis (orientation)<\/li>\n\n<li>bore-to-face relationships that affect seating (orientation\/runout)<\/li><\/ul><p>One simple chain:<\/p><ol><li>Define the functional requirement: allowable gap variation and allowable runout at the cutting region.<\/li>\n\n<li>Convert that into measurable inspection outputs: max TIR at a chosen diameter, max face runout at a chosen face.<\/li>\n\n<li>Allocate tolerance budget across part features:<ul><li>keep wedge drivers (parallelism\/perpendicularity) tight<\/li>\n\n<li>allow more tolerance where it doesn\u2019t create wedge or wobble<\/li><\/ul><\/li>\n\n<li>Verify with measurement capability: a tolerance you can\u2019t measure consistently is not a control\u2014it\u2019s a wish.<\/li><\/ol><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"7473de5d-d035-4a94-bef9-fb0f0b5e6ebe\">Translating stack results into gaps, life, and $\/ton<\/h3><p>This is where the decision gets made: does tighter control pay back?<\/p><p>Translate geometry \u2192 KPI via three links:<\/p><ol><li><strong>Geometry \u2192 contact pattern<\/strong>: tilt\/runout concentrates load on a subset of edges.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Contact pattern \u2192 wear rate<\/strong>: concentrated load rounds edges faster and destabilizes the interlocking gap.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Wear rate \u2192 economics<\/strong>: more sharpening\/replacement, more downtime events, and higher kWh\/ton.<\/li><\/ol><p>A disciplined way to show ROI without making up numbers:<\/p><ul><li>track baseline: downtime hours\/month, knife change interval, kWh\/ton, particle size rejects<\/li>\n\n<li>implement controls: GD&amp;T callouts + spacer binning + torque\/TIR gates<\/li>\n\n<li>re-measure over one knife-life cycle<\/li><\/ul><p>If the runout and gap drift reduce and the knife interval extends, the payback is usually obvious\u2014especially on high-throughput recycling lines.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"450b8d16-c67e-41d1-be88-4b4403bf1f83\">\uc801\uc6a9 \ubc94\uc704 \ubc0f \ud55c\uacc4\uc810<\/h2><p>The GD&amp;T ranges and acceptance-gate ideas in this guide are&nbsp;<strong>starting targets<\/strong>, not universal values.<\/p><p>What you should validate before locking numbers on a drawing:<\/p><ul><li><strong>OEM constraints and drawing standard<\/strong>: align the datum scheme and inspection method with your organization\u2019s chosen standard (ASME Y14.5 or ISO 1101) and any OEM requirements.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Machine size, speed, and functional clearance<\/strong>: higher rotor speed, narrower inter-knife clearance, and harder\/abrasive feed typically require tighter controls and more frequent verification.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Measurement capability<\/strong>: a tolerance you can\u2019t measure repeatably (fixture, datum setup, indicator resolution, operator method) isn\u2019t a real control.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Operating variability<\/strong>: feed composition, moisture, and operator behavior can amplify (or mask) geometry improvements.<\/li><\/ul><p>Use this article to build a controlled process (drawing \u2192 parts \u2192 assembly \u2192 verification). Then confirm the numeric targets with your own stack trials and inspection repeatability studies.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"245ddaf4-c01b-4c45-a2ff-40f5a4fdb477\">\uc775\uba85\ud654\ub41c \uc0ac\ub840 \uc5f0\uad6c: 4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28 \uac10\uc0ac \ubc0f \uac1c\uc120 \uc804\/\ud6c4 \uacb0\uacfc \ube44\uad50<\/h2><div class=\"wp-block-image\"><figure class=\"aligncenter size-full is-resized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1000\" height=\"1000\" src=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades.jpg\" alt=\"\uc775\uba85\ud654\ub41c \uc0ac\ub840 \uc5f0\uad6c: 4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28 \uac10\uc0ac \ubc0f \uac1c\uc120 \uc804\/\ud6c4 \uacb0\uacfc \ube44\uad50\" class=\"wp-image-5496\" style=\"width:600px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades.jpg 1000w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades-300x300.jpg 300w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades-150x150.jpg 150w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades-768x768.jpg 768w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades-12x12.jpg 12w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades-600x600.jpg 600w, https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/11\/Shredder-Blades-100x100.jpg 100w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px\" \/><\/figure><\/div><p>The following example is anonymized to protect OEM drawings and proprietary dimensions. It\u2019s included to show how a tolerance-chain problem is usually&nbsp;<strong>verified, corrected, and held<\/strong>&nbsp;in production.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"92a407c8-5f67-421d-b0fe-5b4ec350633d\">Application snapshot<\/h3><ul><li><strong>Machine<\/strong>: four-shaft industrial shredder<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>\ubc25\uc744 \uba39\uc774\ub2e4<\/strong>: mixed plastic + light aluminum scrap<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Rotor speed<\/strong>: 18\u201328 rpm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Rotor OD<\/strong>: ~340 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Knife OD<\/strong>: 315 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Working width<\/strong>: 760 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Shaft length (between bearings)<\/strong>: ~930 mm<\/li><\/ul><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"7ca874db-5387-4641-bc5e-084808ee1415\">Stack configuration<\/h3><p>Per shaft:<\/p><ul><li>20 rotary knives<\/li>\n\n<li>19 spacers<\/li><\/ul><p>Total stacked components per shaft:&nbsp;<strong>39 pieces<\/strong><\/p><p>Approximate stack height:&nbsp;<strong>~742 mm<\/strong>&nbsp;(20 \u00d7 22 mm knives + 19 \u00d7 16 mm spacers)<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"1f8e5c77-b758-4552-87e3-80539a1eca26\">Critical inspection points and method<\/h3><ul><li><strong>Fixture<\/strong>: master shaft + V-blocks<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>\uc9c0\uc2dc\uc790<\/strong>: 0.001 mm dial indicator<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Point A \u2014 knife OD TIR<\/strong>: measure at knife OD, ~5 mm from the knife face; rotate one full revolution and record maximum TIR.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Point B \u2014 stack end-face axial runout<\/strong>: measure on the outer spacer end face.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Point C \u2014 CMM spot checks<\/strong>: sample 3 knives per batch to confirm bore position and key GD&amp;T items (face flatness, parallelism, perpendicularity) against the drawing datums.<\/li><\/ul><p>A field-proven sequence that reduced clamp-induced error:<\/p><p>Clean shaft \u2192 deburr spacer faces \u2192 check shaft shoulder \u2192 install knives \u2192 light preload \u2192 rotate shaft \u2192 measure OD TIR \u2192 final torque \u2192 re-check TIR.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"466b7a87-ef59-479a-8170-d7f1e7a2f9d6\">Before improvement<\/h3><p>From three consecutive knife-change records:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Knife edge\/OD TIR<\/strong>: 0.08\u20130.15 mm (max observed 0.17 mm)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Stack axial runout<\/strong>: 0.06\u20130.10 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Inter-knife clearance drift<\/strong>: design 2.00 mm; measured 1.93\u20132.09 mm (about \u00b10.08 mm)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Knife life<\/strong>: ~420\u2013520 operating hours, with uneven wear and localized chipping<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Specific energy<\/strong>&nbsp;(mixed plastics): ~24\u201327 kWh\/t, rising as knives wore<\/li><\/ul><p>Root-cause finding: individual parts were often \u201cwithin print,\u201d but the assembly accumulated error from spacer thickness variation, burrs, bore eccentricity, face-to-bore squareness, and shoulder contamination\u2014creating stack wobble.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"14919ff4-8462-4f62-9abc-e2b8703533b1\">Improvements implemented<\/h3><ul><li><strong>Drawing control<\/strong>: revised datum scheme (bore as Datum A; reference face as Datum B) and added geometric controls such as&nbsp;<strong>total runout, flatness, and perpendicularity<\/strong>&nbsp;(not thickness only).<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Selective fit<\/strong>: binned knives and spacers in&nbsp;<strong>0.005 mm<\/strong>&nbsp;thickness bands and built matched sets.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Assembly discipline<\/strong>: changed from one-time tightening to staged torque (<strong>30% \u2192 60% \u2192 100%<\/strong>) with a repeatable pattern.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Cleanliness\/burr control<\/strong>: added stone deburring, solvent cleaning, and compressed-air inspection; any visible burrs were corrected immediately.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Acceptance gates (internal)<\/strong>:<\/li>\n\n<li>knife OD TIR \u2264 0.05 mm<\/li>\n\n<li>stack end-face runout \u2264 0.04 mm<\/li>\n\n<li>stack height \u00b1 0.05 mm<\/li><\/ul><p>Note: these are internal quality gates set tighter than the minimum \u201cit can still run\u201d condition.<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"97bb516e-ee4a-48ce-bbce-a58e3a4f10bb\">After improvement<\/h3><p>Across three consecutive batches:<\/p><ul><li><strong>Knife OD TIR<\/strong>: 0.02\u20130.04 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Stack end-face runout<\/strong>: 0.015\u20130.030 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Inter-knife clearance<\/strong>: 2.00 \u00b1 0.03 mm<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Knife life<\/strong>: 610\u2013720 operating hours (about +30\u201340%)<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Specific energy<\/strong>: 21\u201323 kWh\/t (about \u22128\u201312%), with a more stable trend<\/li><\/ul><p>A practical observation worth capturing in your SOP: experienced operators often rotate the shaft and re-check more frequently during assembly. In this example, adding a rule like \u201ccheck local TIR after every 5 knives\u201d reduced rework and improved repeatability for newer operators.<\/p><p><strong>Caveat:<\/strong>&nbsp;the magnitude of improvement depends on feed composition, moisture, and feeding behavior. In this case, feed was mixed plastic and light aluminum scrap at 18\u201328 rpm \u2014 results were consistent across three consecutive batches under these conditions. The value of the process is that it makes the stack geometry&nbsp;<em>measurable and controllable<\/em>: once geometry is controlled, performance variation can be attributed to feed and process inputs, not to hidden assembly error.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"8d6fa928-c03f-4992-b3a1-b8a32a7301c2\">\uacb0\ub860<\/h2><ul><li>Key checks: GD&amp;T targets, spacer grading, torque\/TIR verification<\/li>\n\n<li>Expected KPI gains: steadier throughput, energy\/ton down, longer blade life, fewer stops<\/li><\/ul><p>If you want a practical way to start, treat this as a three-part control loop:<\/p><ol><li><strong>Specify geometry that actually controls the failure modes<\/strong>&nbsp;(flatness\/parallelism\/perpendicularity\/runout), using your chosen drawing standard (ASME Y14.5 or ISO 1101).<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Control the stack statistically<\/strong>&nbsp;with spacer grading and matched sets so the tolerance chain doesn\u2019t drift lot-to-lot.<\/li>\n\n<li><strong>Verify the assembled reality<\/strong>&nbsp;with a repeatable post-assembly TIR\/runout check and traceable records.<\/li><\/ol><p>A compatible receiving dossier structure for the procurement side of this workflow is covered in&nbsp;<em><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/aftermarket-shredder-knives-procurement-spec-cmm-mtr\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">the audit-ready procurement guide<\/a>.<\/strong><\/em><\/p><p>That\u2019s the technical conclusion engineers can defend: if you control wedge angle drivers and verify TIR after assembly, you remove the hidden mechanism that turns \u201cwithin print\u201d parts into an unstable stack.<\/p><p>To put the three-step control loop into practice, the following starter reference covers the key items:<\/p><p><strong>Stack-up review checklist (drawing + incoming inspection)<\/strong><\/p><ul><li>Drawing has explicit GD&amp;T callouts for flatness, parallelism, perpendicularity, and total runout \u2014 not thickness only<\/li>\n\n<li>Datum scheme is defined (bore\/shaft as Datum A; reference seating face as Datum B) and consistent across drawing and CMM program<\/li>\n\n<li>Spacer and blade thickness tolerance is specified; binning band (e.g. 0.005 mm) is noted on the inspection plan<\/li>\n\n<li>Incoming inspection verifies face flatness and parallelism in addition to thickness<\/li><\/ul><p><strong>QC pack structure (per lot)<\/strong><\/p><ul><li>Material certificate (EN 10204 type, heat\/lot number, grade, chemical\/mechanical properties)<\/li>\n\n<li>Dimensional inspection report (CTF features: thickness, flatness, parallelism, perpendicularity, bore position)<\/li>\n\n<li>Traceability fields: lot ID, assembly order, knife\/spacer batch IDs<\/li><\/ul><p><strong>Runout\/TIR record fields (per assembled stack)<\/strong><\/p><ul><li>Stack ID, assembly date, ambient temperature<\/li>\n\n<li>Knife\/spacer lot IDs and as-assembled order<\/li>\n\n<li>Fixture method (master shaft + V-block or equivalent), indicator type\/resolution\/cal status<\/li>\n\n<li>Staged torque values (30% \/ 60% \/ 100%) + torque tool ID<\/li>\n\n<li>OD TIR at Point A (max\/min), end-face runout at Point B<\/li>\n\n<li>Pass\/fail decision + rework notes if applicable<\/li><\/ul><p>If you\u2019re reviewing knife programs or qualifying aftermarket parts, the product context page for&nbsp;<em><strong><a href=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/%ec%a0%9c%ed%92%88\/%eb%b6%84%ec%87%84%ea%b8%b0-%ec%b9%bc%eb%82%a0\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noreferrer noopener\">Maxtor Metal<\/a>&nbsp;<\/strong><\/em>is a useful reference point for materials and failure modes\u2014but the reliability win comes from drawing controls and inspection discipline.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"8fc47627-b0df-4b11-b581-300710d87b84\">\uc800\uc790 \ubc0f Maxtor Metal \uc18c\uac1c<\/h2><p><strong>\uc81c\uc2dc \uc26c<\/strong>&nbsp;\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4&nbsp;<strong>Senior Quality Engineer<\/strong>&nbsp;~\uc5d0&nbsp;<strong>Maxtor Metal<\/strong>&nbsp;~\uc640 \ud568\uaed8&nbsp;<strong>15 years of experience<\/strong>&nbsp;in industrial blade quality assurance and failure analysis. His work focuses on turning field symptoms (uneven wear, chipping, vibration, gap drift) into measurable root causes\u2014such as tolerance stack-up, datum-control issues, and process variation.<\/p><p>Credentials and qualifications:<\/p><ul><li><strong>ASQ \u2014 Certified Quality Engineer (CQE)<\/strong><\/li>\n\n<li><strong>ISO 9001 \uc120\uc784 \uc2ec\uc0ac\uc6d0<\/strong><\/li>\n\n<li><strong>ASNT \ub808\ubca8 II<\/strong><\/li><\/ul><p>About Maxtor Metal: Maxtor Metal manufactures custom, precision-ground industrial blades and supporting components (including matched-face knives and spacers) and can provide import-ready documentation packages such as material certificates, dimensional inspection reports, and traceability records for OEM and aftermarket programs.<\/p><h2 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"f6c44251-b23a-4dff-8f60-337d124e1b23\">FAQ<\/h2><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"aa6efecd-8ef7-4ead-85f9-dbc8916eed3e\">Q: \uc30d\ucd95(2\ucd95) \ub610\ub294 \ub2e4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354\uc5d0\uc11c \ub098\uc774\ud504 \uad50\uccb4 \ud6c4 \uc9c4\ub3d9\uc774 \ubc1c\uc0dd\ud558\ub294 \uc6d0\uc778\uc740 \ubb34\uc5c7\uc785\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \ubbf8\uc138\ud55c \uc6e8\u30c3\u30b8\uac01 \uc624\ucc28(\ub2e8\uba74 \ud3c9\ud589\ub3c4\/\uc9c1\uac01\ub3c4)\uc640 \ub204\uc801\ub41c \ub450\uaed8 \ud3b8\ucc28\uac00 \uc870\ub9bd \uc2dc \ub098\uc774\ud504\uc758 \uae30\uc6b8\uc5b4\uc9d0\uacfc \ub7f0\uc544\uc6c3(\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc)\uc744 \uc720\ubc1c\ud560 \uc218 \uc788\uc2b5\ub2c8\ub2e4. \ubd80\ud558\uac00 \uac78\ub9ac\uba74 \uc774\ub294 \uc8fc\uae30\uc801\uc778 \ud1a0\ud06c \ubcc0\ub3d9\uacfc \uc9c4\ub3d9\/\uc804\ub958 \ud53c\ud06c \ud604\uc0c1\uc73c\ub85c \ub098\ud0c0\ub0a9\ub2c8\ub2e4. \uc870\ub9bd \ud6c4 TIR(\ucd1d\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc) \uac80\uc0ac\ub97c \uc2e4\uc2dc\ud558\ub294 \uac83\uc774 \uc774\ub97c \ud655\uc778\ud558\ub294 \uac00\uc7a5 \ube60\ub978 \ubc29\ubc95\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"4327560c-2dad-4282-8686-f834dc763154\">Q: \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub098\uc774\ud504 \uc801\uce35 \uc2dc \ub204\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28(Tolerance stack-up)\ub294 \uc5b4\ub5bb\uac8c \uacc4\uc0b0\ud569\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \ud5c8\uc6a9 \uac04\uaca9 \ub4dc\ub9ac\ud504\ud2b8\ub098 \ud5c8\uc6a9 \ucd1d\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc(TIR) \uac19\uc740 \uae30\ub2a5\uc801 \uc694\uad6c\uc0ac\ud56d\uc744 \uba3c\uc800 \uc815\uc758\ud55c \ub2e4\uc74c, \ub450\uaed8 \uacf5\ucc28\uc640 \uc6e8\u30c3\u30b8 \ud6a8\uacfc\ub97c \uc720\ubc1c\ud558\ub294 \uae30\ud558\uacf5\ucc28(\ud3c9\ud589\ub3c4\/\uc9c1\uac01\ub3c4)\ub97c \ud3ec\ud568\ud558\ub294 \uacf5\ucc28 \uccb4\uc778\uc744 \uad6c\uc131\ud558\uc2ed\uc2dc\uc624. \uce58\uba85\uc801\uc778 \ubd88\ub7c9 \uc870\ud569\uc744 \ucc3e\uc544\ub0b4\ub824\uba74 \ucd5c\uc545 \uc870\uac74\ubc95(Worst-case)\uc744 \uc0ac\uc6a9\ud558\uace0, \uc81c\uc870 \uacf5\uc815 \uc0b0\ud3ec\uac00 \uc548\uc815\uc801\uc77c \ub54c\ub294 RSS(Root Sum Squares, \ud1b5\uacc4\uc801 \uacf5\ucc28\ubc95)\ub97c \uc801\uc6a9\ud558\uc2ed\uc2dc\uc624\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"1b206bed-af61-4938-ad95-c41953771927\">Q: \uc801\uce35\ub418\ub294 \ub098\uc774\ud504\uc640 \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c\uc5d0\uc11c \uac00\uc7a5 \uc911\uc694\ud55c GD&amp;T(\uae30\ud558\uacf5\ucc28) \uad00\ub9ac \ud56d\ubaa9\uc740 \ubb34\uc5c7\uc785\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \uc548\ucc29\uba74(\uc88c\uba74)\uc758 \ud3c9\uba74\ub3c4, \ub300\ud5a5\ud558\ub294 \uc591 \ub2e8\uba74 \uac04\uc758 \ud3c9\ud589\ub3c4, \ub370\uc774\ud130\u30e0 \ucd95(\uae30\uc900\ucd95)\uc5d0 \ub300\ud55c \uc548\ucc29\uba74\uc758 \uc9c1\uac01\ub3c4, \uadf8\ub9ac\uace0 \uae30\uc900\ucd95\uc5d0 \ub300\ud55c \ucd1d\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc(Total runout)\uc774 \ub098\uc774\ud504\uc758 \uae30\uc6b8\uc5b4\uc9d0 \ubc0f \ub7f0\uc544\uc6c3 \ubd88\ub7c9 \ubaa8\ub4dc\uc640 \uac00\uc7a5 \uc9c1\uacb0\ub418\ub294 \ud575\uc2ec \ud56d\ubaa9\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"a126b289-aa1a-4352-9371-fc127c7c76ca\">Q: \ub2e4\ucd95 \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub098\uc774\ud504 \uc801\uce35 \uc2dc \ud5c8\uc6a9 \uac00\ub2a5\ud55c \ucd1d\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc(TIR)\/\ub7f0\uc544\uc6c3 \uae30\uc900\uc740 \ubb34\uc5c7\uc785\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \uc288\ub808\ub354\uc758 \uc7a5\ube44 \uaddc\uaca9, \uc6b4\uc804 \uc18d\ub3c4, \uadf8\ub9ac\uace0 \uc694\uad6c\ub418\ub294 \ub098\uc774\ud504 \uad50\ucc28 \uac04\uaca9(Interlocking gap)\uc758 \uc548\uc815\uc131\uc5d0 \ub530\ub77c \ub2e4\ub985\ub2c8\ub2e4. \uc2e4\ubb34\uc801\uc778 \uc811\uadfc\ubc95\uc740 \uac04\uaca9 \ubcc0\ub3d9\uacfc \uc9c1\uacb0\ub418\ub294 \uce21\uc815 \uc9c0\uc810\uc744 \uc120\uc815\ud55c \ud6c4, \uadc0\uc0ac\uc758 \uac04\uaca9 \uc694\uad6c \uc0ac\uc591 \ubc0f \uac80\uc0ac \ub2a5\ub825\uc5d0 \ub9de\ucdb0 \ud569\uaca9 \ud55c\uacc4\uce58(Acceptance limit)\ub97c \uc124\uc815\ud558\uace0, \uc2dc\uac04\uc774 \uacbd\uacfc\ud568\uc5d0 \ub530\ub77c \ubc1c\uc0dd\ud558\ub294 \ub4dc\ub9ac\ud504\ud2b8\ub97c \ucd94\uc801 \uad00\ub9ac\ud558\ub294 \uac83\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"fcbad7ca-5451-4af4-8856-012e77abadcb\">Q: \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c \ub450\uaed8 \ub4f1\uae09 \ubd84\ub958(Grading)\uac00 \uac04\uaca9 \ubd88 \uc548\uc815\uc131\uc744 \uc5b4\ub5bb\uac8c \uac10\uc18c\uc2dc\ud0b5\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c\ub97c \ubbf8\uc138\ud55c \ub450\uaed8 \uacf5\ucc28 \ub300\uc5ed\ubcc4\ub85c \ubd84\ub958(Binning)\ud558\uace0 \uc815\ubc00 \ub9e4\uce6d \uc138\ud2b8(Matched sets)\ub97c \uad6c\uc131\ud558\uba74 \uc624\ucc28\uac00 \ud55c\ucabd \ubc29\ud5a5\uc73c\ub85c\ub9cc \ub204\uc801\ub418\ub294 \ud3b8\ud5a5 \ud604\uc0c1\uc744 \ubc29\uc9c0\ud560 \uc218 \uc788\uc2b5\ub2c8\ub2e4. \uacf5\uc815 \uc0b0\ud3ec \uc790\uccb4\ub97c \uc644\uc804\ud788 \uc81c\uac70\ud560 \uc218\ub294 \uc5c6\uc9c0\ub9cc, \ub204\uc801 \uc624\ucc28\ub97c \uc555\ucd95\ud558\uc5ec \uc870\ub9bd \uc2dc\ub9c8\ub2e4 \uc77c\uad00\ub41c \uc7ac\ud604\uc131\uc744 \ud06c\uac8c \ud5a5\uc0c1\uc2dc\ud0b5\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"a08257c6-6e72-4c02-a6a6-e3a22744c478\">Q: \uac1c\ubcc4\uc801\uc73c\ub85c\ub294 '\uacf5\ucc28 \uc774\ub0b4'\uc778 \ub098\uc774\ud504\ub4e4\uc774 \uc65c \uc870\ub9bd \ud6c4 \uadf8\ub8f9 \ub0b4\uc5d0\uc11c \ud3b8\ub9c8\ubaa8\uac00 \ubc1c\uc0dd\ud558\ub294 \uac83\uc785\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: '\uacf5\ucc28 \uc774\ub0b4'\ub77c\ub294 \uc870\uac74\uc774 \uac01 \ubd80\ud488\uc758 \ubbf8\uc138 \uc624\ucc28 \ubc29\ud5a5\uc774 \uc11c\ub85c \uc0c1\uc1c4\ub418\ub294 \uac83\uc744 \ubcf4\uc7a5\ud558\uc9c0 \uc54a\uae30 \ub54c\ubb38\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4. \ub9cc\uc57d \uc5ec\ub7ec \ubd80\ud488\uc758 \ub2e8\uba74 \ud3c9\ud589\ub3c4\uac00 \ub3d9\uc77c\ud55c \ubc29\ud5a5\uc73c\ub85c \ubbf8\uc138\ud558\uac8c \ud2c0\uc5b4\uc838 \uc788\ub2e4\uba74, \ub204\uc801 \uc2dc \uc801\uce35 \uad6c\uc870 \uc804\uccb4\uac00 \uae30\uc6b8\uc5b4\uc9c0\uac8c \ub418\uc5b4 \ud2b9\uc815 \ub098\uc774\ud504(\ucee4\ud130)\uc5d0 \ud558\uc911\uc774 \uc9d1\uc911\ub429\ub2c8\ub2e4 Winston\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"f50b91a8-057f-4081-b0ad-f91169944bea\">Q: \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub098\uc774\ud504 \ub3c4\uba74 \uc124\uacc4 \uc2dc ASME Y14.5\uc640 ISO 1101 \uc911 \uc5b4\ub5a4 \ud45c\uc900\uc744 \uc0ac\uc6a9\ud574\uc57c \ud569\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \uadc0\uc0ac \ubc0f \ud611\ub825\uc0ac\uc758 \uac80\uc0ac \uc124\ube44\uac00 \uc9c0\uc6d0\ud558\ub294 \ud45c\uc900\uc744 \uc0ac\uc6a9\ud558\uc2ed\uc2dc\uc624. \ubbf8\uad6d \uc911\uc2ec\uc758 \ud504\ub85c\uc81d\ud2b8\uc5d0\uc11c\ub294 ASME Y14.5\uac00 \uc8fc\ub85c \uc0ac\uc6a9\ub418\uba70, \uae00\ub85c\ubc8c \ud504\ub85c\uc81d\ud2b8\uc5d0\uc11c\ub294 ISO GPS \uc2dc\uc2a4\ud15c \ub0b4\uc758 ISO 1101\uc774 \ubcf4\ud3b8\uc801\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4. \uac00\uc7a5 \ud070 \ub9ac\uc2a4\ud06c\ub294 \ub450 \uaddc\uc815\uc744 \ud63c\uc6a9\ud558\uac70\ub098 \ub370\uc774\ud140(Datum) \ub17c\ub9ac\ub97c \ubaa8\ud638\ud558\uac8c \ubc29\uce58\ud558\ub294 \uac83\uc785\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p><h3 class=\"wp-block-heading\" id=\"7f74d1d6-40a9-4a48-88c1-816e88201861\">Q: \ucd94\uc801\uc131(Traceability) \uad00\ub9ac\ub97c \uc704\ud574 \uc288\ub808\ub354 \ub098\uc774\ud504 \uc801\uce35 \uc870\ub9bd \uacfc\uc815\uc744 \uc5b4\ub5bb\uac8c \ubb38\uc11c\ud654\ud574\uc57c \ud569\ub2c8\uae4c?<\/h3><p>A: \ub098\uc774\ud504\uc640 \uc2a4\ud398\uc774\uc11c\uc758 \ubd80\ud488\/\u30ed\u30c3\u30c8 ID, \uc870\ub9bd \uc21c\uc11c, \ud1a0\ud06c \uccb4\uacb0 \ubc29\uc2dd\/\uacf5\uad6c ID, \uadf8\ub9ac\uace0 \uc870\ub9bd \ud6c4 \ub7f0\uc544\uc6c3\/TIR(\ucd1d\ud754\ub4e4\ub9bc) \uce21\uc815 \uacb0\uacfc\ub97c \uae30\ub85d\ud558\uc2ed\uc2dc\uc624. \uc774\ub97c \ud1b5\ud574 \ud5a5\ud6c4 \ud604\uc7a5 \ubd88\ub7c9(Field failure) \ubc1c\uc0dd \uc2dc \uc6d0\uc778\uc744 \ucd94\uc801\ud560 \uc218 \uc788\ub294 \ud3d0\uc1c4 \ub8e8\ud504(Closed loop)\uac00 \uc644\uc131\ub429\ub2c8\ub2e4\u3002<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Key takeaways: In multi-shaft shredders, small errors in blade thickness, spacer thickness, face flatness, squareness, and bore\/shaft geometry don\u2019t stay small. They add up into shaft tilt and total indicated runout (TIR), which shows up as gap drift, uneven load, vibration, and shorter knife life. This guide gives practical GD&amp;T targets, selective-fit spacer strategy, assembly\/QA [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":7886,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1,1267],"tags":[1277],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v23.6 (Yoast SEO v23.6) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Fix Uneven Wear: Multi-shaft Blade Tolerance Stacking Guide<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"Control gap drift and vibration in multi-shaft shredder stacks: GD&amp;T targets, 0.005 mm spacer grading, staged torque, and TIR acceptance gates\" \/>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/multi-shaft-blade-tolerance-stacking-gdt-controls\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"ko_KR\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Multi-shaft Blade Tolerance Stacking: GD&amp;T Controls, Spacer Selective Fit, and Post-assembly TIR Verification\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Control gap drift and vibration in multi-shaft shredder stacks: GD&amp;T targets, 0.005 mm spacer grading, staged torque, and TIR acceptance gates\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:url\" content=\"https:\/\/maxtormetal.com\/ko\/multi-shaft-blade-tolerance-stacking-gdt-controls\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:site_name\" content=\"Maxtor Metal | Custom Industrial Blade Manufacturer &amp; 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