loose-fit

loose-fit — noun

1. in mechanical engineering, a condition where two mating parts are designed with

1.名詞B2
釋義

in mechanical engineering, a condition where two mating parts are designed with a deliberate gap between them, allowing the parts to slide, rotate, or be taken apart without force or jamming.

例句

The piston rings have a loose-fit inside the cylinder groove so they can expand freely when the engine heats up.

purpose clause: 'so they can expand freely'

The quality inspector measured a loose-fit between the shaft and the bearing housing during the final check.

engineering context: shaft and bearing

同義詞
  • clearance fit

    more formal engineering term, especially in technical drawings and standards

  • sliding fit

    a specific subtype where the parts can slide smoothly against each other

  • free fit

    used informally to describe a very loose connection with no binding

反義詞
  • interference fit

    the opposite condition where the parts are pressed together with no clearance

  • press fit

    a type of interference fit assembled under pressure

文法句型

a loose-fit between [part A] and [part B]

have a loose-fit

用法筆記

Commonly found on engineering drawings, quality inspection reports, and assembly instructions. Describes an intentional design feature, not a manufacturing defect or a worn-out part.

常見錯誤

The mechanic said the loose-fit was caused by wear and needs repair.
The mechanic said the worn bearing now has too much play, which is a sign of damage, not a loose-fit.
💡A loose-fit is an intentional design choice; excess play from wear is a defect.