Sphere Roundness - Sphericity Defined
Explore the concept of sphericity, its measurements, and its significance in assessing roundness in various applications.
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Table of Contents
Roundness Defined
The roundness (or sphericity) of a sphere is a measure of how spherical it is. The roundness forms two perfect spheres, one inside the other, which together form a spherical zone. That zone width is the roundness value.
So, Roundness = Zone Width → The roundness value is the total zone width — the radial gap between the two concentric spheres.
Example 1:
Given a zone width or roundness of 2.5 microns (approximately 0.0001 inches), it can also be expressed as bilateral = ±1.25 microns (approximately 0.00005") from the best-fit sphere center radius
Example 2:
So if your best-fit sphere has radius R, then:
Outer sphere = R + 1.25 microns
Inner sphere = R − 1.25 microns
All measured points fall within that 2.5 micron-wide shell or zone.
GD&T Roundness
GD&T uses tolerance values as total zone widths, not ± values.
Sphere Roundness Diagram
Instructions
1 - Click on the Measured surface word in the black box to toggle the measured surface on and off.
2 - Click on the Outer and Inner sphere words in the black box to toggle the zone surfaces on and off.
3 - Turn the outer and inner spheres on.
4 - Turn the measure surface off.
4 - Adjust the roundness error to visualize the two spheres, creating a zone for that roundness deviation.
5 - Turn the measured surface on to see a sample measured sphere with deformations.