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Engineering Engineering

Engineering - PowerPoint Presentation

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Engineering - PPT Presentation

Design and Presentation Introduction to Orthographic Projection or Multiview Drawings UNT in partnership with TEA Copyright All rights reserved What are Multiview Drawings Essentially every object has 6 sides that could be drawn ID: 255613

unt partnership copyright tea partnership unt tea copyright rights reserved draw lines view line views top front construction drawing

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Slide1

Engineering Design and Presentation

Introduction to Orthographic Projection or Multiview Drawings

UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide2

What are Multiview Drawings?

Essentially every object has 6 sides that could be drawn.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide3

Question: What views do you think we draw?

We only draw three (3) of the views because it would be redundant to draw, say the back, because it’s the same as the front.So we only draw the Top, Front, & Right Side.3

UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide4

Why only draw these views?

We only draw the views needed to fully show the shape of the object.Choose the view that shows the most information; that will be your Front View.In some other countries, they do draw the left view; but, in general, you should draw the right side.Showing only these three views saves time, makes the drawing easier to understand, and it’s all you need to have to the object manufactured.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide5

Why do we draw hidden lines?

Hidden lines are used to show something that you can’t see in that view, but you need to know where it is.Hidden lines need to be drawn correctly and uniformly so that they are easy to see.5

UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide6

What is difference between an orthographic projection and a drawing?

The result of a orthographic projection is the multiview drawing.Surfaces of the object are shown in true size/dimension and/or shape.Follow all drafting and dimensioning rules for drafting like line types, correct tool usage, etc.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide7

Correct Layout?

Correct layout shape should resemble the letter “L”.Start with the top, then front, & then right side.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide8

Points to Ponder:

Pencil Point To Ponder: “Why do you think we only use a pencil & not pens?”Triangle

Point To Ponder: “Why do you only use a triangle and never a scale or ruler for drawing straight lines?”

Draw

LIGHT lines

and go back to darken when done.

Point To Ponder: “Why do we do this?”

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide9

Graph Paper:

*Yes you will draw on this paper

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide10

Now let’s look at the “TV Box” that we made.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide11

Count the # of squares for the FRONT View.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide12

Measure 3.5 squares to right & left of the center mark.

Line up bottom of triangle to get straight Vertical lines.

3.5 3.5

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide13

If you are drawing it right, the views – lines – measurements will all line up. Think the “L” format (Lined Up).

Use either triangle when drawing a line to keep it uniform & neat/straight.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide14

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide15

Repeat the process by looking at the Front View. Lightly draw what you see centered on the construction lines you drew already. It should look like this.

Construction Line or Center Mark Top View

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide16

Project your lines over all ways.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide17

Count the squares and LIGHTLY draw them centered over the construction lines you already drew for the TOP view.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide18

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide19

Looking at the Top View, lightly draw what you see centered on the construction lines you drew already. It should look like this.

Construction Line or Center Mark Top View

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide20

And RIGHT SIDE views.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide21

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide22

Repeat the process by looking at the Right Side View, lightly draw what you see so that it fits in the box. Think “connect the dots” to finish it up. It should look like this.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide23

Should look like this, LIGHT LINES!

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide24

Draw Projection Lines to meet the angle line. Then draw straight down.

Construction Line or Center Mark Top View

Do the same for the horizontal lines in the Front View.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide25

This is what it will look like if you did it right. ALL lines are light! See how the views line up and meet. That means less measuring and work for us!

“L” Format (Lined Up).

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide26

Then Darken in the Visible/Object Lines

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide27

NEAT & PRINTED Title Block Text!

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide28

Make sure that you Dimension EACH of your drawings! Because when you remove the master graph paper, you will need know these sizes for future use!

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide29

If you have done it correctly it will look like this.

UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved. Slide30

DARKEST, make your Border / Title Block / “Picture Frame” the darkest line!

UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved.Slide31

Now, grade yourself using the rubric on each paper. Notice how the points change. The points given is the MAX you could receive for each problem.

I will be going back and checking these. I will adjust as needed, so be HONEST! Otherwise, the score drops auto 5 pts if you give yourself, say 25 pts, when you only deserve 22 pts.

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UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved.

31Slide32

Remember to….

Always darken in your titleblock’s border.Always neatly letter your text.Complete the self assessment rubric, your teacher will double check this.Tomorrow you will draw more complicated multiviews but with less instructions just examples shown.UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved.

32Slide33

Textbook

Texas approved publishers are:Goodheart-WillcoxDelmar LearningPrentice HallAll have a companion workbook’s with more problems. I recommend using it or any other approved textbook, i.e., if you are ATC or TechPrep and must teach using local colleges textbook.UNT in partnership with TEA. Copyright ©. All rights reserved.

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