Basic Lines and Projections Scales Cross-Sectional Views and Sections

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Presentation transcript:

Basic Lines and Projections Scales Cross-Sectional Views and Sections Graphical Language Basic Lines and Projections Scales Cross-Sectional Views and Sections

Part One Basic Lines and Projections

Technical Drawings In the technological world, a number of drawings are necessary in order to communicate the size, materials, function and other important parts about an object. Each type of technical drawing has a specific role in what it demonstrates. Each technical drawing must also be done in such a way that it uses normalized symbols and lines. This is an international language in drafting.

Symbols for Movement and Force

CONVENTIONAL LINES FACING DEEP In a technical drawing, each type of line has its own significance. Each is distinguished from the other by a particular thickness or shape. The object above is drawn in isometric projection. It is portrayed on the left by three views. We will use this object to illustrate the principal lines found in technical drawing on the slides which follow. 6

CONVENTIONAL LINES A OBJECT LINE OR VISIBLE OUTLINE 7

CONVENTIONAL LINES OBJECT LINE OR VISIBLE OUTLINE The object line or visible outline is made of a continuous line that portrays the visible forms of the object. It is a thick line, its thickness chosen to clearly show the shape. OBJECT LINE OR VISIBLE OUTLINE 8

CONVENTIONAL LINES B HIDDEN FEATURE LINE 9

CONVENTIONAL LINES B HIDDEN FEATURE LINE The hidden feature line is made of a dashed line that portrays surfaces and edges that are hidden from view. The line is medium sized, half the width of the one chosen for the visible outline. B HIDDEN FEATURE LINE 10

CONVENTIONAL LINES C C THE CENTER LINE 11

CONVENTIONAL LINES THE CENTER LINE The center line is made from phantom lines. It is used to designate the axes of circular or cylindrical shaped objects. The line is half the width of the one used for hidden features. It is a fine line. THE CENTER LINE 12 12

CONVENTIONAL LINES Your Turn 13

CONVENTIONAL LINES SketchUp Answer – Visible Lines 2 14

CONVENTIONAL LINES 15

CONVENTIONAL LINES 16 SketchUp Answer – Hidden Center Line 19

CONVENTIONAL LINES 17

CONVENTIONAL LINES SketchUp Answer – Hidden Lines 8 18 SketchUp Answer – Hidden Lines 8 SketchUp Answer – Hidden Lines 10

Technical drawings must not only faithfully reproduce the shape of objects, but also serve as a guide to their construction or manufacturing. Dimensioning an object means giving all the necessary dimensions to build a technical object. Ø 8 FACING Ø14 X 3 DEEP 80 50 45 40° 13 20 40

CONVENTIONAL LINES D DIMENSION LINE 20

CONVENTIONAL LINES DIMENSION The dimension is a value used to indicate size in a technical drawing. This value is given in millimetres. 40 20 40° 45 80 DIMENSION 21

CONVENTIONAL LINES 50 13 40 20 24 40° 45 20 E 80 EXTENSION LINE 22

CONVENTIONAL LINES EXTENSION LINE Extension lines are fine lines that indicate the placement of the dimensions. 50 13 40 20 24 40° 45 20 80 EXTENSION LINE 23

CONVENTIONAL LINES SUMMARY A B C D E F G H J LINE NAME PURPOSE THICKNESS 100 % Thick A Object line or visible outline Portrays visible forms. B Hidden feature line Portrays surfaces and edges that are Medium 50 % hidden from view C Portrays the center of a round or circular Fine 25 % Center line object. D Is used to indicate the dimension. Extension line Fine E Is used to indicate the dimension. Dimension line Fine F Cutting plane line Indicates the placement of an Very thick imaginary cut. G Indicate the surface imagined to have Section lines Fine been cut. H Used to shorten the view of a part. Break line Fine J Indicates the part of a drawing to which Fine Leader a note refers 24

3 Projections In drafting, 3 projections are common: Multiview Isometric Oblique

Multiview Orthographic Projections This looks at the six sides of a 3-dimensional object. Each side is represented 2-dimensionally. Usually, we look at only three sides: top view, side view and front view.

Multiview Orthographic Projections TOP VIEW Here is the usual representation of views in multi-view orthographic projections. This type of drawing is used in technology because it allows description without deforming the faces of objects. 27 FRONT VIEW RIGHT SIDE VIEW

Isometric An isometric projection rotates the object with respect to the observer so that all three dimensions can be seen in one view. These look more like a picture than other projections. No surface of the object is parallel to the paper.

A cube shown with this type of projection pivots 45º to show two faces on the projection plane instead of a single face.

Isometric drawing Grids and isometric drawing A grid which includes all three isometric axes may be used to draw isometric perspectives. 30

Oblique Like isometric, oblique drawings show the object in 3-dimensions. Unlike isometric, oblique drawings show one side parallel to the paper.

Part Two Scales

Scales Technical drawings have a scale associated with them. There are three types: 1. Scale reduction: The drawing is smaller than in real life. 1:50 (drawing is 50 times smaller than real life). 2. Full size: Same size as real life. 1:1 3. Scale increase: Drawing is bigger than real life. 50:1 (50 times larger than real life).

Part Three Cross-sectional views and sections

Cross-Sectional Views In technical diagrams, the visible contours are shown with a continuous line. Hidden contours are shown with broken lines. Sometimes, the hidden contours are so intricate that the hidden contours lines do not make sense, and so a cross-section will be drawn.

… In a cross-section, a new line called a cutting line is drawn in and will show what is on the inside of the object. The purpose is to expose the hidden details to view, revealing the interior.