Kinematic coupling

Kinematic coupling describes fixtures designed to exactly constrain the part in question, providing precision and certainty of location. A canonical example of a kinematic coupling consists of three radial v-grooves in one part that mate with three hemispheres in another part. Each hemisphere has two contact points for a total of six contact points, enough to constrain all six of the part's degrees of freedom. An alternative design consists of three hemispheres on one part that fit respectively into a tetrahedral dent, a v-groove, and a flat.[1]

  1. ^ Slocum, Alexander (April 2010). "Kinematic Couplings: A Review of Design Principles and Applications". Prof. Slocum Via Angie Locknar. Elsevier B.V. hdl:1721.1/69013.

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