I am creating an eagle part for this part - http://www.farnell.com/datasheets/1703161.pdf - and in the dimensions section, there is a symbol that I don't understand and I have not been able to find the answer on google. I have attached a screenshot.
On CAD drawings (like that one) it represents "diameter". However, putting "2-" in front makes no sense. My guess is that it is their feeble way of indicating both leads are 0.7mm in diameter.
So it simply means that both pins are 0.7mm diameter? Also does anybody know how to determine the package of this buzzer as it is not on the database and if the package was already in one of my eagle libraries it would save me some time.
Different way to explain that there are two pins with Ø0.7 (aka 2x Ø0.7 or 2-Ø0.7) mechanical drawings use since 1992 2x Ø0.7 and not Ø0.7 (2x). Electrical sheets seems to use 2-Ø0.7
The way I read that drawing is: 2 pins 0.7mm diameter each. In the US we use a dot to denote decimals. Europeans use comma. Hence 0.7 US = 0,7 Europe (and probably rest of the world).