Engineering Drawing - Lettering and Lines Presentation
Engineering Drawing - Lettering and Lines Presentation
Group Members
Gichuru Wainaina Samuel Nyakundi
Richard Wageche
Merkle Awuor Joseph Ngugi
Sheldon Muganda
Alex Ndeke Joseph Mureithi
William Wambulwa
Chris Gichuki Thomas Mabelle
Samuel Ngigi
Abdi Adan Geoffery Mulosi
Graphics language
Describe a shape (mainly).
Word language
Describe an exact size, location and specification of the object.
Word language
Lettering
Line Types
Thin
1. Dimension line 2. Extension line 3. Leader line Hidden line Center line
indicate the sizes and location of features. represent features that cannot be seen in the current view. represents symmetry, path of motion, centers of circles,
Break Lines
Center Lines
Phantom Lines
Lines
Dimension Lines
Section Lines
Extension Lines
Cutting Planes
Leader Lines
Visible/Object Lines
Dark, heavy lines. Used to represent the outline or contour of the object being drawn. Define features you can see in a particular view.
Hidden Lines
Light, narrow, short, dashed lines. Shows the outline of a feature that can not be seen in a particular view. Used to help clarify a feature, but can be omitted if they clutter a drawing.
Section Lines
Thin line usually drawn at a 45 degree angle. Indicates the material that has been cut through in a sectional view.
Section Line
Center Lines
Thin line consisting of alternating long and short dashes. Used to represent the center of round or cylindrical features, or the symmetry of a feature.
Dimension Lines
Thin lines capped on the ends with arrowheads and broken along their length to provide a space for the dimension numeral. They indicate length.
Extension Lines
Thin lines used to establish the extent of a dimension. Can also be used to show extension of a surface to a theoretical intersection as shown in (b). Begin 1.5mm from the object and extend to 3mm beyond the last dimension. They should not cross dimension lines.
Leader Lines
Thin lines used to connect a specific note to a feature. Also used to direct dimensions, symbols, item number and part numbers on a drawing. Commonly drawn at 45, 30 and 60 degrees. Has a short shoulder (3-6mm) at one end beginning at the center of the vertical height of text, and a standard dimension arrowhead at the other end touching the feature.
Leader lines should not cross each other. Leader lines should not be excessively long. Leader lines should not be vertical or horizontal. Leader lines should not be parallel to dimension lines, extension lines or section lines.
Arrowheads
Used to terminate dimension lines and leader lines and on cutting-plane lines and viewing plane lines. They should be three times as long as they are wide. They should be the same size throughout the drawing. The filled arrowhead is generally preferred because of its clarity.
Break Lines
Used to break out sections for clarity or for shortening a part.
Three types of break lines with different line weights: a) Short Breaks. b) Long Breaks. c) Cylindrical Breaks.
(a) Short break line on metal shape; (b) Short Break Line on wood shape.
Phantom Lines
Thin lines made up of long dashes alternating with pairs of short dashes. Three purposes in drawings a) To show the alternate position of moving parts. b) To show the relationship of parts that fit together. c) To show repeated detail.
Example 1
Example 2
Types of Lettering
The two types of lettering are: 1. Double Stroke Lettering. 2. Single Stroke Lettering.
Application of Lettering
Lettering in Engineering Drawings is used in writing Title Blocks which play a crucial role in drawings, they are used to record all of the important information necessary for the working drawings. A HB Pencil is used. What does the Title Block contain?
Title of the drawing. Symbol denoting the method of
Drawing Number.
Scale. Name of the firm.
projection.
Initials of staff who designed, checked & approved.
Guidelines
Extremely light horizontal lines that are necessary to regulate the height of letters. In addition, light vertical or inclined guidelines are needed to keep the letters uniformly vertical or inclined. Guidelines are absolutely essential for good lettering. Guidelines are drawn using Hard (2H to 4H) Lead Pencils with light pressure. HB grade conical end pencils are used for lettering.
h c1 c2 c3 b1 b2
-(height of capital letters) -(height of lower-case letters) -(tail of lower-case letters) -(stem of lower-case letters) -(spacing between baselines) -(spacing between baselines)
c2
c2
1.8, 2.5, 3.5, 5, 6, 10, 14, 20 mm. (Sizes selected based upon size of drawing)
Drawing numbers, title blocks and letters denoting cutting planes, sections are written in 10mm size. Drawing title is written in 7mm size. Hatching, subtitles, materials, dimensions, notes etc. are written in 3.5 mm size. Space between lines is 3/10 h (height of capital letters) Space between words may be equal to the width of the alphabet M or 3/5 h (height of capital letters).
Examples
I letter
1
A letter
1
2 1
B letter
4 5
3 3 2
Order of Strokes
Stroking is done based on the slope of each letter and the strokes vary with order and direction.
Stroking Groups
The I-H-T Group The letter I is The Foundation Stroke. The top of T is drawn first to the full width of the square and the stem is started accurately at its mid point.
I H
Stroking Groups
The L-E-F Group The L is made in two strokes. The first two strokes of the E are the same for the L, the third or the upper stoke is lightly shorter than the lower and the last stroke is the third as long as the lower. F has the same proportion as E.
L
E F
Stroking Groups
The V-A-K Group V is the same width as A, the A bridge is one third up from the bottom. The second stroke of K strikes stem one third up from the bottom and the third stroke branches from it.
V
A K
Stroking Groups
The M-W Group Are the widest letters. M may be made in consecutive strokes of the two verticals as of N. W is made with two Vs.
M W
Stroking Groups
The O-Q-C-G Group The O families are made as full circles and made in two strokes with the left side a longer arc than the right. A large size C and G can be made more accurately with an extra stroke at the top.
O Q C
Stroking Groups
The O-Q-C-G Group (cont.)
Stroking Groups
The D-U-J Group The top and bottom stokes of D must be horizontal, fail line to observe this is a common fault with beginners U is formed by two parallel strokes to which the bottom stroke be added. J has the same construction as U, with the first stroke omitted.
D
Note:- The bottom stroke in J is drawn once, and not twice as shown in the animation.
Stroking Groups
The P-R-B Group The number of stokes depends up on the size of the letter. The middle line of P and R are on centerline of the vertical line.
P R
B
Stroking Groups
The N-Z-X-Y Group The parallel sides of N are generally drawn first. Z is drawn without lifting the pen. Z and X are both started inside the width of the square on top and run to full width on the bottom.
N
made up of three
strokes.
figures height.
The bottom of 2 and top of 5 and 7 should be straight lines. For 2 the reverse curve should cross
the center of the space. The ampersand (&) is made of three strokes.
The figures are two-thirds the height of the whole numbers, with a clear
space above and below the line, making the total height of the fraction nearly twice the cap height (h).
Spacing
Uniformity in spacing of letters is a matter of equalizing spaces by eye.
The background area between letters, not the distance between them, should be approximately equal. Words are spaced well apart, but letters within words should be spaced closely.
L IN E S
For either upper case or lower-case lettering, make the spaces between words approximately equal to a capital O.
LET T ERS
Types of Spacing
DRAWING
Contour
Contour can be denoted as straight, slant and curve. Adjacent contour can be
1. straight-straight 3. straight-slant (or slant-straight) : II, IN, IM, IP etc.
: IV, IW etc.
4. curve-curve
5. slant-curve (or curve-slant) 6. slant-slant 7. The L and T
: OO, OG etc.
: VO, WG, VC etc.
: VW, VX etc. : LT
Lettering Uniformity
Important to produce good drawings. Uniform in style, size, inclination, weight and space. Carelessness might result in mistakes.
ENGINEERING DRAWINGS
LEtTErING
LE
TTERING
References
French, T. E., (1918). A MANUAL OF ENGINEERING DRAWING FOR STUDENTS AND DRAFTSMEN. London: Hill Publishing Co., Ltd. Engineering Drawing Fundamentals: Introduction to Engineering Drawing. Retrieved from http://pioneer.netserv.chula.ac.th/~kjirapon/lecturenote.html. Madsen D. A., Madsen D. P., (2011). ENGINEERING DRAWING & DESIGN, Fifth Edition. New York: Cengage Learning.
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