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DRAWING LINES AND LETTERS

DRAWING LINES AND LETTERS. Types of Drawings. All Drawings. Technical. Artistic. Drawings (technical/engineering ). Diagrams ( design & technical). Sketches (conceptual). simulated perspective. Diagram (design plan). Diagram (technical). Oblique projection. Isometric projection.

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DRAWING LINES AND LETTERS

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  1. DRAWINGLINES AND LETTERS Drawing Lines and Letters

  2. Types of Drawings All Drawings Technical Artistic Drawings (technical/engineering) Diagrams (design & technical) Sketches (conceptual) simulated perspective Diagram (design plan) Diagram (technical) Oblique projection Isometric projection Multi view orthographic Less technical More technical Drawing Lines and Letters

  3. Sketching • When you first get an idea for something you want to build you may draw it roughly, without using instruments or accurate scales. • Allows an idea to be expressed quickly in graphic form • Is prepared free-hand (without drawing instruments) • Is not done to scale, but it respects the rules of technical drawing as much as possible, and is made roughly proportional to the object represented. Drawing Lines and Letters

  4. Technical Drawings • Serve as a reference to workers, architects or machinists. • Presents all the information necessary for the object’s construction. • Is made with great precision. • Requires the use of rulers, compass and protractor or drafting software. • Is done to scale, and respects the proportions of the object represented. • Respects conventions in the mode of the representation. Drawing Lines and Letters

  5. Difference: Sketch: made without drafting tools... Just pencil and paper. Scale is approximate, not accurate, but the sketch should still look like the object. Drawing: made with drafting tools... Ruler, set squares, protractor and compass. Scale should be accurate and the drawing carefully made. Drawing Lines and Letters

  6. Full name Country Code Drawing Standard 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. Standard Code USA ANSI American National Standard Institute JAPAN JIS Japanese Industrial Standard UK BS British Standard AUSTRALIA AS Australian Standard GERMANY DIN Deutsches Institut fur Normung ISO International Standards Organization Drawing Lines and Letters

  7. Drawing Sheet A4 Trimmed paper of a size A0 ~ A4. A3 Standard sheet size(JIS, ISO) A4 210 x 297 A3 297 x 420 A2 420 x 594 A1 594 x 841 A0 841 x 1189 A2 A1 A0 (Dimensions in millimeters) Drawing Lines and Letters

  8. Parts of a Drawing Sheet The Basic Components of a Drawing Sheet Revision Block Drawing Border Title Block Drawing Lines and Letters

  9. c d d c c Sheet size c (min) d (min) A4 10 25 A3 10 25 A2 10 25 A1 20 25 A0 20 25 Orientation of drawing sheet 1. Type X (A0~A4) 2. Type Y (A4 only) Drawing space Drawing space Border lines Title block Title block Drawing Lines and Letters

  10. STANDARD SHEETS There are ANSI/ASME standards for international and U.S. sheet sizes. Note that drawing sheet size is given as height width. Most standard sheets use what is called a “landscape” orientation. * May also be used as a vertical sheet size at 11" tall by 8.5" wide. Drawing Lines and Letters

  11. Typical Sheet Sizes and Borders Drawing Lines and Letters

  12. Sketching As you learn and practice how to sketch, you will find that you develop your own way of doing things, your own style. This is very acceptable, as there is no absolutely correct method for sketching, but only recommendations. The most important requirement of freehand sketching is that you be comfortable. It is recommended that you start by doing all two-dimensional sketches on graph paper. Graph paper is very helpful when preparing freehand sketches. It helps you sketch straight lines, allows you to set up guide points for curved lines, and can be used to establish proportions. Drawing Lines and Letters

  13. Sketching Straight Line Today almost every drawing is made using a computer. Sketches should be proportional. A square should look like a square, and a rectangle like a rectangle. Graph paper is very helpful in sketching proportionally. 1. Hold the pencil naturally. 2. Spot the beginning and end points. 3. Swing the pencil back and forth between the points, barely touching the paper until the direction is clearly established. 4. Draw the line firmly with a free and easy wrist-and-arm motion. Drawing Lines and Letters

  14. Sketching Steps in Sketching 1. Block in main shape. 2. Locate the features. 3. Sketch arcs and circles. 4. Sketch lines. Drawing Lines and Letters

  15. Sketching Vertical line Horizontal line Drawing Lines and Letters

  16. Sketching Nearly vertical inclined line Nearly horizontal inclined line Drawing Lines and Letters

  17. Sketching Arc Method 1 : Starting with a square Method 2 : Starting with a center line Drawing Lines and Letters

  18. Sketching Small Circle Method 1 : Starting with a square 1. Lightly sketching the square and marking the mid-points. 2. Draw light diagonals and mark the estimated radius. 3. Draw the circle through the eight points. Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Drawing Lines and Letters

  19. Example Sketching The lines are sketched without using instruments other than pencils and erasers. Drawing Lines and Letters

  20. Sketching Example Drawing Lines and Letters

  21. Bisection of A Line Drawing lines • Place your compass point on A and stretch the compass MORE THAN half way to point B. • With this length, swing a large arc that will go BOTH above and below segment AB.  • Without changing the span on the compass, place the compass point on B and swing the arc again.  The new arc should intersect the previous one above and below the segment AB. • With your scale/ruler, connect the two points of intersection with a straight line. • This new straight line bisects segment AB.  Label the point where the new line and AB cross as C. • Segment AB has now been bisected and AC = CB.  Drawing Lines and Letters

  22. Drawing lines Bisection of An Angle 1. Place the point of the compass on the vertex of angle BAC (point A). • Stretch the compass to any length so long as it stays ON the angle. • Swing an arc with the pencil that crosses both sides of angle ABC.  This will create two intersection points (E and F) with the sides of the angle. • Place the compass point on E, stretch your compass to a sufficient length and draw another arc inside the angle - you do not need to cross the sides of the angle. • Without changing the width of the compass, place the point of the compass on F and make a similar arc.  These two small arcs in the interior of the angle should be crossing each other. 6. Connect the point of intersection of the two small arcs to the vertex A of the angle with a straight line. Drawing Lines and Letters

  23. Drawing lines Find the Centre of an Arc • Select three points A, B and C on the arc and join AB and BC • Bisect AB and BC. • Fine the intersection point of the bisecting lines/bisectors. That is the centre of the arc. Drawing Lines and Letters

  24. Drawing lines Inscribe a Circle in a Triangle • Bisect angle ABC and angle BAC. • Fine the intersection point of the bisecting lines/bisectors. That is the centre of the circle. • The radius of the circle is the length of a perpendicular line on any of the sides of the triangle drawn from the centre of the circle. Drawing Lines and Letters

  25. Circumscribe a Circle on a Triangle Drawing lines • Bisect sides AC and BC. • Fine the intersection point of the bisecting lines/bisectors. That is the centre of the circle. • The radius of the circle is the length of a line joining any one of the vertices of the triangle to the centre of the circle. Drawing Lines and Letters

  26. To communicate non graphic information. As a substitute for graphic information, in those instance where text can communicate the needed information more clearly and quickly. - shape - space between letters and words Legibility - size- line thickness Uniformity Text on Drawings Text on engineering drawing is used : Thus, it must be written with Drawing Lines and Letters

  27. LETTERING STANDARDS • Most hand-drawn notes use lettering about 3 mm (1/8” or .125) high; for titles about 6 mm (1/4” or .25). • CAD notes are set using the keyboard and sized to be in the range of 3 mm (1/8") tall according to the plotted size of the drawing. An Example of Lettering and Titles Using CAD • CAD drawings typically use a Gothic lettering style but often use a Roman style for titles. When adding lettering to a CAD drawing, a good rule of thumb is not to use more than two fonts within the same drawing. Drawing Lines and Letters

  28. Upper-case letters & Numerals Straight line letters Curved line letters Curved line letters & Numerals Drawing Lines and Letters

  29. Lower-case letters Drawing Lines and Letters

  30. Stroke Sequence L T I F E H Drawing Lines and Letters

  31. Stroke Sequence V X W Drawing Lines and Letters

  32. Stroke Sequence Z M K N 4 Y A Drawing Lines and Letters

  33. Stroke Sequence G Q C O Drawing Lines and Letters

  34. Stroke Sequence U P B D R J 1 2 Drawing Lines and Letters

  35. Stroke Sequence 7 5 Drawing Lines and Letters

  36. Stroke Sequence 6 0 3 S 8 9 Drawing Lines and Letters

  37. Stroke Sequence i l Drawing Lines and Letters

  38. Stroke Sequence w x k v z Drawing Lines and Letters

  39. Stroke Sequence y f t j r Drawing Lines and Letters

  40. Stroke Sequence o a b c d p q e Drawing Lines and Letters

  41. Stroke Sequence n m h g u s Drawing Lines and Letters

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