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Before anything can be built, constructed, or manufactured with any degree of accuracy, it must be drawn first. ©Emil Decker, 2009.

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Presentation on theme: "Before anything can be built, constructed, or manufactured with any degree of accuracy, it must be drawn first. ©Emil Decker, 2009."— Presentation transcript:

1 Before anything can be built, constructed, or manufactured with any degree of accuracy, it must be drawn first. ©Emil Decker, 2009

2 Drawings may be as simple as a quick sketch made on a piece of scrap paper with a No. 2 pencil or a complex 3-D Computer Aided Drafting model. ©Emil Decker, 2009

3 Drawings on paper are often scaled to a proportionate size of the original object. Imagine trying to find a piece of paper big enough to draw a house to its full size. ©Emil Decker, 2009

4 Drawings on computers, however, are often drawn full size or scale within the program, but later adjusted to fit on paper sized to a printer or plotter’s capability. ©Emil Decker, 2009

5 There are two basic types of scales used to create accurate drawings: Architectural and Engineering. They differ in their uses, and the ratios of their units. ©Emil Decker, 2009

6 A scale is much like a ruler. It is divided into units, but the units are representative of the full size. For instance, a 1:10 engineering scale would use 1 inch to represent 10 inches, or 10 feet, or even 10 miles.

7 Engineering scales are either metric or Imperial (English) standard, which uses the inch as the base unit. Each inch represents the ratio listed on the scale being used. ©Emil Decker, 2009

8 Scales can be flat like a ruler, but most scales are triangular in shape. This allows them to hold a range of calibrated scales. ©Emil Decker, 2009 Often, there is a complementary unit of measurement that goes right to left. Two scales, going in opposite directions yields as many as 11 or 12 different scales on one tool.

9 Here we see an engineering scale that has a 1:10 ratio. Also, above this scale is one with a 1:30 ratio. Common units also include 1:20, 1:40, 1:50, and 1:60. ©Emil Decker, 2009

10 American Architect scales are a little harder to read, as they are divided by 1/2, 1/4, 1/8, and 1/16’s of an inch. The standard 1:1 scale is labeled 16. Shown here, you can see the 3/16 scale also. ©Emil Decker, 2009

11 The standard relationships on an architect scale are 1” = a foot; 1/2”, 1 1/2”, 1/4”, 3/4”, 1/8”, 3/8”, 3/16”, & 3/32” = a foot. Scales do not start at the edge of the tool, but at a point designated “0”. ©Emil Decker, 2009

12 Since the units on a scale represent feet, there is often a continuation on the opposite side of the zero representing inches. The thickness of a pencil lead can be “inches thick” on very small scales. ©Emil Decker, 2009

13 European and other countries around the world use metric scales. Since meters are decimal, or base 10, they are easy to work with. ©Emil Decker, 2009


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