ISO 1101-1983 rus PDF
Name in English:
St ISO 1101-1983 rus
Name in Russian:
Ст ISO 1101-1983 rus
Original standard ISO 1101-1983 rus in PDF full version. Additional info + preview on request
Full title and description
ISO 1101:1983 — Technical drawings — Geometrical tolerancing — Tolerancing of form, orientation, location and run‑out — Generalities, definitions, symbols, indications on drawings. This entry documents the 1983 edition (Edition 1) of ISO 1101; the original ISO publication languages are English and French (national‑language adoptions/translations, including Russian, may exist as separate national documents).
Abstract
The standard is an extract giving general rules, definitions and the symbolic language used to indicate geometrical tolerances on technical drawings. It lists tolerancing characteristics and symbols and provides examples of indication and interpretation suitable for everyday use. An extension (Ext. 1) provides tables of toleranced characteristics and interpretation examples.
General information
- Status: Withdrawn / superseded.
- Publication date: December 1983 (1983‑12).
- Publisher: International Organization for Standardization (ISO).
- ICS / categories: 01.100.20 — Mechanical engineering drawings.
- Edition / version: Edition 1 (1983).
- Number of pages: 24 pages (main document).
Scope
Defines the general principles, definitions and graphic symbols for specifying geometrical tolerances of form, orientation, location and run‑out on technical drawings. It shows how tolerancing characteristics are indicated and interpreted on drawings and provides worked examples to help designers, draughtsmen and inspectors apply the symbol language consistently. (Later revisions and newer editions expand and update the rules.)
Key topics and requirements
- Formal definitions of geometrical characteristics (form, orientation, location, run‑out) and their symbolic representations.
- Rules for tolerance frames and the placement of values and datum references on drawings.
- Specification and interpretation of toleranced elements and tolerance zones (including profile tolerances).
- Use of datum systems and reference features to control orientation and location.
- Examples illustrating conventional notation, indication practice and interpretation rules (extension/extract documents provide tabular examples).
Typical use and users
Used by mechanical designers, technical drafters, metrologists, manufacturing engineers, quality and inspection personnel, CAD/GPS implementers and standards librarians as a reference for correct drawing annotation and for interpreting geometrical tolerances on engineering documentation. It is typically used when specifying or inspecting part geometry and in training on GPS/drawing practice.
Related standards
Subsequent and related standards in the GPS family and drawing practices include later editions of ISO 1101 (2004, 2017), and other GPS standards dealing with datums, profile tolerancing and model‑based definitions (for example ISO standards produced by ISO/TC 213). ISO 1101:1983 was revised by ISO 1101:2004 and later consolidated into current editions (see ISO 1101:2017).
Keywords
geometrical tolerancing, GPS, technical drawings, tolerance frames, form tolerances, orientation tolerances, location tolerances, run‑out, datum, symbols, ISO 1101, drawing notation.
FAQ
Q: What is this standard?
A: ISO 1101:1983 is the 1983 edition of the ISO standard that defines the graphical language and basic rules for indicating geometrical tolerances (form, orientation, location and run‑out) on technical drawings.
Q: What does it cover?
A: It covers generalities, definitions, the symbol set used for geometrical tolerancing, rules for tolerance frames and datum references, and examples of how tolerances are shown and interpreted on drawings.
Q: Who typically uses it?
A: Mechanical designers, draughtsmen, metrology and inspection staff, manufacturing engineers, CAD/GPS practitioners and educators who need a standard reference for drawing notation and interpretation of geometrical requirements.
Q: Is it current or superseded?
A: ISO 1101:1983 is withdrawn and has been superseded by later revisions (notably ISO 1101:2004 and the consolidated ISO 1101:2017). For current rules and the most up‑to‑date interpretation, consult the latest ISO 1101 edition.
Q: Is it part of a series?
A: Yes — ISO 1101 is part of the broader GPS (Geometrical Product Specifications) family of standards (work by ISO/TC 213) and is commonly used together with other GPS and drawing standards addressing datums, profile tolerances and model‑based specifications.
Q: What are the key keywords?
A: Geometrical tolerancing, GPS, tolerance frames, form, orientation, location, run‑out, datum, symbols, technical drawings, ISO 1101.