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Chapter 10 Multi-View Drawings

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1 Chapter 10 Multi-View Drawings
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

2 Plane of Projection (Paper)
Projection Theory- Represent 3D objects on 2D media to give a clear understanding what the part looks like 2 Variables Line of Sight (LOS) Plane of Projection (Paper)

3 Plane of Projection- Flat plane where is projected
Line of Sight (LOS)- imaginary ray of light between an observers eye and an object Plane of Projection- Flat plane where is projected (always perpendicular from LOS) 90° Any > 3D

4 Different distances change what it will look like
Perspective- all lines originate from finite distance of sight at a single point Different distances change what it will look like How we see it! Real Life

5 Parallel- all lines of sight are parallel (part positioned parallel to picture plane at infinite distance) Imaginary Not Real Life

6 Planes of Projection (Dimension they provide)
Frontal (_________ & ________) Horizontal (__________ & ___________) Profile (_________ & __________) Solid Works calls these planes what? What is the minimum # of views to get all 3 dimension of a part?

7 What are some examples of each?
Types of Drawings One View Two View Three View What are some examples of each?

8 Understanding Exercise
Identify which plane of projection the view asked for is projected onto Identify which of the 4 views is the correctly projected according to the arrow or view direction

9 Multi-View Projection vs. Perspective
No distorted surfaces or dimensions (Scalable) Aligned views fill in gaps of confusion What is not clear with the isometric alone?

10 6 Principle Views 3 views conventionally used:
____________ , __________, and _______ What do they call it in Solid Works?

11 Rules to select Views: Most Descriptive views Natural Orientation
Minimum # of views No dimensions to hidden lines

12 Number of Views and Which is Front View?

13

14 First Angle Projection Third Angle Projection
VS. Third Angle Projection 3 names you might hear? Front to Back Back to Front

15 Number of Views and Which is Front View?
Homework

16 Tangency on Planes

17 SOLID WORKS TEMPLATE SETTINGS

18 SOLID WORKS TEMPLATE SETTINGS

19 SOLID WORKS TEMPLATE DRAFTING SETTINGS

20 SOLID WORKS TEMPLATE SETTINGS

21 Fillets (Interior Corner) Rounds (Exterior Corner) on Planes
vs. Rounds (Exterior Corner) on Planes What is difference between a fillet/ round & a chamfer? 2 ways to define chamfer _____ x ______& ______ x ______

22 Runout- corners where fillets intersect cylinders

23 True Length/Foreshortened/ Point view
Edge line Types Normal Inclined Oblique Comparison Chart True Length/Foreshortened/ Point view

24 True Size & Shape/Foreshortened / Edge
Planes of a part Normal Inclined Oblique What do we have to create to show true shape and size of an inclined or oblique plane? Comparison Chart True Size & Shape/Foreshortened / Edge

25 How do I really locate where to drill the hole?
Why do we care? How do I really locate where to drill the hole?

26 Understanding Exercise
Identify what line or plane type is represented in the example below.

27 Partial Views- Show only necessary information to convey design intent
Use Break or Center line Noted: Some hidden lines removed for clarity

28 Why is scale not noted in other views?
Removed Views AKA Detailed Views Why is scale not noted in other views?

29 Homework Determine Front View Minimum# of views Tangencies removed All needed dimensions

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