Total Runout Symbol
⌰ represents the technical term “total runout” in a compact symbol form.
U+2330
“⌰” is a technical character used to denote TOTAL RUNOUT (Unicode U+2330). It’s commonly seen in engineering, quality, and measurement contexts where runout specs are referenced. Use it to label tolerances and inspection notes clearly.
Total Runout Symbol Meaning
The symbol ⌰ is the Unicode character named “TOTAL RUNOUT” (U+2330). In engineering and quality documentation, “total runout” refers to the maximum variation of a feature’s position as it is rotated, typically measured against a datum. It’s used as a compact label for drawings, inspection reports, and specifications so readers can quickly identify the measurement being referenced. Because it has a dedicated Unicode code point, you can reliably copy it into design files, spreadsheets, documentation, and UI text without needing a custom image.
Common uses
- •Engineering drawings: labeling a tolerance or measurement callout as total runout
- •Inspection and QC reports: indicating the runout metric being checked
- •Manufacturing work instructions: referencing accepted total runout limits for parts
- •Technical documentation: summarizing measurement results concisely in text
- •UI and dashboards: naming metrics or columns in measurement tracking software
Examples
⌰ Total Runout Symbol
- ⌰Total runout: ⌰ 0.02 mm (max)
- ⌰Check feature A for ⌰ before final assembly.
- ⌰Inspection criteria includes ⌰ and radial runout limits.
- ⌰Report measured value for ⌰ at station 3.
- ⌰Tolerance set to ⌰ 0.05 mm per drawing section B.
Variations
Ready to copy
Technical codes
| Unicode | U+2330 | |
| HTML Entity | ⌰ | |
| HTML Code | ⌰ | |
| CSS | \2330 |
FAQ
What does ⌰ mean?
⌰ is the Unicode symbol for TOTAL RUNOUT, commonly used to label a runout measurement in technical and quality contexts.
What is the Unicode code point for ⌰?
The code point for ⌰ is U+2330.
How can I copy ⌰ into documents or design software?
Copy the character directly from this page. You can also paste the HTML entity form ⌰ into supported editors.
Will ⌰ display correctly everywhere?
It should work in Unicode-capable fonts and systems. If a font lacks support, the character may not render as intended.