4 drawing instruments and technical sketching chapter

17

Upload: francis-haynes

Post on 18-Jan-2018

234 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc. Multiview Drawing Multiview drawing contains enough views of structure to represent its true size and shape from all sides All structures can be viewed from six basic sides –Six sides: above, below, front, back, left side, right side

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter
Page 2: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

4Drawing Instruments

and Technical Sketching

Chapter

Page 3: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Multiview Drawing• Multiview drawing contains enough views of structure

to represent its true size and shape from all sides

• All structures can be viewed from six basic sides– Six sides: above, below, front, back, left side, right

side

Page 4: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Multiview Drawing

Page 5: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Orthographic Projection• Orthographic projection is the most basic drafting

technique.

• Orthographic projection is a means of representing the height, width, and depth of a three-dimensional object on two-dimensional paper.

• Orthographic projection shows structure at true size and shape using top, front, and right side view.

Page 6: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Three Principal Views• The three principal views in orthographic projection

are the top, front, and right side views.

• In architectural drafting, the views are similar but have different names.– The top view of a house is called a plan view; used

as the basis for most other drawings.

Page 7: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Three Principal Views– The floor plan is a top view in section taken about

half way up the wall.

– The front elevation in architectural drafting is the same as the front view in mechanical drafting.

– Architectural drafters ordinarily draw a view of each side of the structure, which are called elevations.

Page 8: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Plan Views• Top view of a structure is the plan view

– Basis for most other views in set of working drawings

• Floor plan is frame of reference for all other views– It is a horizontal section view

Page 9: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Plan Views

Page 10: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Floor Plan

Page 11: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Elevations• Architectural drafters ordinarily draw a view of each

side of the structure

• Elevations are named according to directional relationship to the site or simply front, rear, left, and right elevations

Page 12: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

How Elevations are Projected

Page 13: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Lines Used in Architectural Drawing

• The alphabet of lines– Border lines– Object lines– Hidden line– Centerline– Dimension line– Long break line– Short break line

– Cutting-plane line– Section line– Guidelines– Construction line– Leaders – Extension line

Page 14: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Alphabet of Lines

Page 15: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Alphabet of Lines

Page 16: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Line Type Application

Page 17: 4 Drawing Instruments and Technical Sketching Chapter

Permission granted to reproduce for educational use only.

© Goodheart-Willcox Co., Inc.

Letter Size• Most lettering should be 1/8" or 3/32 " high• Use only capital letters• Titles are lettered larger with bold underlines