Drawing 1: Drawing Fundamentals Lectures: Measuring
Drawing 1: Drawing Fundamentals Lectures: Measuring
Measuring
The following drawing is one inch on a scale. As you can see, the inch is divided into
16ths, meaning there is 16 divisions. You can also problem solve that an inch can be
divided into 8ths, 4ths, and halves.
Drafting Tools
This picture shows all the drafting tools needed to perform quality standard technical
drawings.
The scale is used to measure lines precisely. It has different scales for different proportions. For a normal ruler,
find the scale that indicates a "16" for represents 16 divisions of an inch.
Dividers are another way of measuring by placing the dividers along a scale to find a measurement and then
placing the dividers on the paper.
The pencil is your drawing tool. Different shades of pencil lines represent different types of lines.
The compass is used to create circles, arcs, and ellipses. To draw an arc, circle, and ellipses, the point of the
compass should be placed at a circles center; the pencil edge should be placed at the end of the radius.
The eraser is used to erase all unnecessary lines like guide lines and mistakes.
The erasing guide helps the drafter erase only lines that need to be erased - not accidentally erasing others.
The pencil pointer is sand paper to keep the pencil edge sharp.
The dusting brush is used to keep the paper and table clean of eraser debris.
Notice the angles on each corner of the triangles.
Set Up
To begin drafting, the paper needs to be square with the
table. Place the T-square tight against the side of the table.
Place the bottom edge of the paper along the top edge of
the T-square. Make sure the bottom edge is aligned with
the top edge of the T-square. Tape the top two corners of
the paper down with masking tape. Move the T-square
away and tape the bottom two corners of the paper. The
paper is now square with the table. All your vertical lines
and horizontal lines will now be parallel with the paper's
edges.
Lines
Guide lines and construction lines are drawn very lightly. Construction lines are used to block in
drawings, while guide lines are used for lettering. They may be erased, if necessary, after they
have served their purpose.
Border lines are the heaviest line used in drafting. Just as the name suggests, border lines
represent the border created for the drawing.
Object lines or visible lines are used to outline the visible edges of the object being drawn. They
should be drawn so that the views stand out clearly on the drawing. All of the visible object lines
on the drawing should be the same darkness. Object lines are dark lines but a bit lighter than
border lines.
Dimension lines are usually capped at each end with arrowheads and is placed between two
extension lines. The dimension line is a light line but a bit darker than construction lines.
Extension lines are the same darkness as dimension lines. It extends the dimension beyond the
outline of the view so that the dimension can be read easily.
Hidden lines are used to show the hidden features of the object. It is drawn the same darkness
as a object line and is composed of short lines approximately 1/8 in. long separated by spaces
approximately 1/16 in.
Center lines are used to indicate the center of symmetrical objects. It is a dark line which is a bit
lighter than a object line composed of alternate long (3/4 in.) and short (1/8 in.) dashes.
Cutting plane is line as a object line. It is used to indicate where the sectional view will be taken.
Section lines are used when drawing the inside features of an object. They indicate material cut
by the cutting-plane line, and also indicate the general classification of the materials. The lines
are dark but a bit lighter than object lines.
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