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Study Lesson 1 Introduction.

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Presentation on theme: "Study Lesson 1 Introduction."— Presentation transcript:

1 Study Lesson 1 Introduction

2 Contents Engineering drawing Drawing standards Drawing sheet Scale
Lettering Line types

3 Engineering Drawing --Albert Einstein
The words of the language, as they are written or spoken, do not seem to play any role in my mechanism of thought. The psychical entities which seem to serve as elements in thought are certain signs and more or less clear images which can be “voluntarily” reproduced and combined--this combinatory play seems to be the essential feature in productive thought before there is any connection with logical construction in words or other kinds of signs which are communicated to others --Albert Einstein Contents

4 Effectiveness of Graphic Language
1. Try to write a description of this object. 2. Test your written description by having someone attempt to make a sketch or visualize from your description. You can easily understand that … The word language is inadequate for describing the size, shape and features completely as well as concisely.

5 Graphic Language in Engineering Drawing
“Engineering drawing” or “blueprint” uses lines to represent the features of an object. Features of an object are surface (include plane) and edge. Surface Edge

6 Ways to Create an Engineering Drawing
A drawing can be created in 3 ways Freehand sketch Using typical drawing instruments Using a computer

7 Create a Drawing : Freehand sketch
The lines are drawn using only pencil and erasers on a blank or grid paper. Example Pictorial sketch Orthographic sketch

8 Create a Drawing : Using instruments
Drawing instruments are used to draw straight lines, circles, and curves concisely and accurately. Drawings are usually made to scale. Example

9 Create a Drawing : Using a computer
Computer aided drafting (CAD) software is used. Example 2D drawing Solid modeling

10 Elements of a Drawing A clear and precise engineering drawing requires both graphics and word languages. Graphics language Describe a shape (mainly). Word language Describe an exact size, location and specification of the object.

11 Text on drawings : Example
Dimensions & Notes General notes Title block

12 Knowledge and Skills Require
Engineering Drawing Graphics language Word language Using line types Geometric construction Visualization Projection method Dimensions & Notes Visualization is the ability to mentally picture things that do not exists. Contents

13 Drawing Standard Drawing sheet Scale Lettering Line types Contents

14 Definition and Necessity
Drawing standards are set of rules that govern how technical drawings are represented. Drawing standards are used so that drawings convey the same meaning to everyone who reads them.

15 Standard Code Country Code Full name ANSI
American National Standard Institute USA JIS Japanese Industrial Standard Japan BS British Standard UK AS Australian Standard Australia Deutsches Institut für Normung DIN Germany ISO International Standards Organization

16 Drawing Standard Drawing Sheet
Contents

17 Drawing Sheet : Standard size
Trimmed paper of a size A0 ~ A4. A4 A3 Standard sheet size (JIS) A x 297 A x 420 A x 594 A x 841 A x 1189 A2 A1 A0 (Dimensions in millimeters)

18 Drawing Sheet : Orientation & Margin
1. Type X (A0~A4) c Sheet size c (min) d (min) A A A A A d c Border lines Drawing space c Title block 2. Type Y (A4 only) d Drawing space Title block

19 Drawing Standard Drawing Scale
Contents

20 Drawing Scales : Definition
Length, size Scale is a ratio between the linear dimension of a drawn representation of an object and the actual object. : 1 2 Drawing Actual

21 Drawing Scales : Designation
Designation of a scale consists of the word “SCALE” followed by the indication of its ratio, as follows SCALE 1:1 for full size SCALE X:1 (X > 1) for an enlargement scales SCALE 1:X (X > 1) for a reduction scales Drawing scale is commonly found in a title block.

22 Drawing Scales : Notes Dimension numbers shown in the drawing represent the “true size” of an object and they are independent of the drawing scale used.

23 Drawing Scales : Standard scale
Standard reducing scales are 1:2, 1:5, 1:10, 1:20, 1:50, 1:100 Standard enlarging scales are 2:1, 5:1, 10:1, 20:1, 50:1, 100:1

24 Drawing Standard Lettering
Contents

25 Recommendation Text’s style on the drawing Examples
must have the following 2 properties Examples GOOD Not uniform in style. Legibility - Shape Space between letters Space between words Not uniform in height. Not uniformly vertical. Uniformity Not uniform in thickness of stroke. - Size (or text height) - line thickness Inappropriate space between letters

26 Style (this course) Gothic vertical style.
Begin the sentence, phrase or word with a capital letter. Text height 2~3 mm. Space between lines of text is about of text height. Height of the lower-case letter is about 2/3 of that of a capital letter.

27 Basic Strokes Straight Slanted Horizontal Curved Examples “I” letter
“A” letter “B” letter 4 5 1 1 1 2 6 3 3 2

28 Suggested Strokes Sequence
Upper-case Letters & Numerals Straight line letters Curved line letters & Numerals

29 Lower-case Letters

30 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
I L T F E H Skip section

31 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
V X W Skip section

32 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
M K Z Y A 4 Skip section

33 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
G Skip section

34 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
D U P B R J Skip section

35 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
1 2 5 7 Skip section

36 Stroke Sequence : Upper-case
3 6 8 9 Skip section

37 Stroke Sequence : Lower-case
i Skip section

38 Stroke Sequence : Lower-case
v w x k z Skip section

39 Stroke Sequence : Lower-case
j y f t r Skip section

40 Stroke Sequence : Lower-case
b d p q e Skip section

41 Stroke Sequence : Lower-case
g n m h u s Skip section

42 DRAWING D R A W I N G Word Composition
Space between the letters depends on the adjacent contour of the letters. DRAWING Non-uniform spacing D R A W I N G Uniform spacing Word having non-uniform spacing is more readable.

43 DRAWING Word Composition
Contour Contour can be denoted as “straight”, “slant” and “curve”. Adjacent contour can be 1. straight-straight : II, IN, IM, IP etc. 2. straight-curve (or curve-straight) : IO, QR etc. 3. straight-slant (or slant-straight) : IV, IW etc. 4. curve-curve : OO, OG etc. 5. slant-curve (or curve-slant) : VO, WG, VC etc. 6. slant-slant : VW, VX etc. Spacing

44 Sentence Composition ALL O DIMENSIONS O ARE O IN MILLIMETERS O UNLESS
Leave the space between words equal to the space requires for writing a letter “O”. Example ALL O DIMENSIONS O ARE O IN MILLIMETERS O UNLESS OTHERWISE O SPECIFIED.

45 Drawing Standard Line Types
Contents

46 Name according to application
Basic Line Types & Name according to application Thickness 1. Dimension line 2. Extension line 3. Leader line Thick Thin Visible line Style Continuous Hidden line Dash Chain Center line 1. Visible line represent features that can be seen in the current view. 2. Dimension line Extension line Leader line indicate the sizes and location of features. 3. Hidden line represent features that can not be seen in the current view. 4. Center line represents symmetry, path of motion, centers of circles, axis of axisymmetrical parts

47 Example Contents


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