1 / 28

Chapter 8 Section Views

Chapter 8 Section Views. Introduction. Terminology & common practices. Kind of sections. Dimensioning. TOPICS. Introduction. GRAPHICS COMMUNICATION WITH ENGINEERING DRAWING. Orthographic Projection. Dimensioning. Clear ?. Object. Working drawing. No. Section Views. Yes. Finish.

infinity
Download Presentation

Chapter 8 Section Views

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 8 Section Views

  2. Introduction Terminology & common practices Kind of sections Dimensioning TOPICS

  3. Introduction

  4. GRAPHICS COMMUNICATION WITH ENGINEERING DRAWING Orthographic Projection Dimensioning Clear ? Object Workingdrawing No Section Views Yes Finish

  5. Clarify the views by Facilitate the dimensioning. Let See the example PURPOSES OFSECTION VIEWS reducing or eliminating the hidden lines.

  6. EXAMPLE : Advantage of using a section view.

  7. Terminology andcommon practices

  8. Cutting plane Cutting plane line Section lines CUTTING PLANE Cutting plane is a plane that imaginarily cuts the object to reveal the internal features.

  9. CUTTING PLANE LINE Cutting plane line is an edge view of the cutting plane. Indicate the path of cutting plane.

  10. Viewing direction Viewing direction Viewing direction CUTTING PLANE LINESTYLES Thick line ANSI standard Thick line Thin line JIS & ISO standard This course

  11. Section lines SECTION LINING Section lines or cross-hatch lines are used to indicate the surfaces that are cut by the cutting plane. Drawn with 4H pencil.

  12. The section lines are different for each of material’s type. For practical purpose, the cast iron symbol is used most often for any materials. SECTION LINES SYMBOLS Cast iron, Malleable iron Sand Concrete Wood Steel

  13. The spaces between lines may vary from 1.5 mm for small sections to 3 mm for large sections. SECTION LINING PRACTICE COMMON MISTAKE

  14. It should not be drawn parallel or perpendicular to contour of the view. SECTION LINING PRACTICE COMMON MISTAKE

  15. Kinds of Sections

  16. KIND OF SECTIONS 1. Full section 2. Offset section 3. Half section 4. Broken-out section 5. Revolved section (aligned section) 6. Removed section (detailed section)

  17. FULL SECTION VIEW The view is made by passing the straight cutting plane completely throughthe part.

  18. OFFSET SECTION VIEW The view is made by passing the bended cutting plane completely throughthe part. Do not show the edge views of the cutting plane.

  19. Hidden lines are normally omitted from section views. TREATMENT OF HIDDEN LINES

  20. HALF SECTION VIEW The view is made by passing the cutting plane halfway through an object and remove a quarter of it.

  21. HALF SECTION VIEW A center line is used to separate the sectioned half from the unsectioned half of the view. Hidden line is stayed in un-section half of the view.

  22. BROKEN-OUT SECTION VIEW The view is made by passing the cutting plane normal to the viewing direction and removing the portion of an object in front of it.

  23. BROKEN-OUT SECTION VIEW A break line is used to separate the sectioned portion from the unsectioned portion of the view. Break line is a thin continuous line (4H) and is drawn freehand. There is no cutting plane line.

  24. EXAMPLE : Comparison among several section techniques

  25. Dimensioningin Section View

  26. In most cases, dimensioning of the section views follows the typical rules of dimensioning. GOOD POOR

  27. 10 10 f 50 f 50 DIMENSIONING GOOD POOR

  28. DIMENSIONING For a half-section view, use dimension line with only one arrowhead that points to the position inside the sectioned portion. f 50

More Related