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ENTC 1110

ENTC 1110. Traditional Tools. Traditional Tools. Traditional tools are devices used to assist in improving the quality and efficiency of technical drawings. The assistance includes: drawing straight lines straighter, making circles more circular, and increasing productivity

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ENTC 1110

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  1. ENTC 1110 Traditional Tools

  2. Traditional Tools • Traditional tools are devices used to assist in improving the quality and efficiency of technical drawings. • The assistance includes: • drawing straight lines straighter, • making circles more circular, and • increasing productivity • the speed with which drawings are made.

  3. Typical Tools • The tools typically used to create mechanical drawings and sketches include: • Wooden or mechanical pencils • Instrument sets • Compass • Dividers • 45- and 30/60-degree triangles • Scales • Irregular curves • Protractors • Erasers and eraser shields • Drawing paper • Circle templates • Isometric templates

  4. Taping a Drawing Sheet to the Surface • Before starting a drawing, the student must tape a sheet of paper to the drawing surface. • Typically this involves • Aligning the bottom of the paper or the border line printed on the paper with the top edge of the T-square or drafting machine. • Tape the four corners of the paper to the drawing surface using drafting tape.

  5. ENTC 1110 PENCILS

  6. Mechanical pencils are more commonly used in drawing than are wood pencils. • Mechanical pencils use either • Drafting leads or • Thin leads

  7. Drafting leads are thicker and must be sharpened using lead pointers or abrasive paper. • Thin-lead pencils use leads of specific diameters that do not need to be sharpened. • Thin-lead diameters correspond to ANSI standard line thicknesses. • 0.7 mm • 0.35 mm

  8. Wood pencils have to be sharpened, using pencil pointers and abrasive paper to create the various line thicknesses used in technical drawing. • Hand drawn lines must be of uniform weight and thickness and must correctly spaced.

  9. Line weight refers to the relative darkness of the line.

  10. Mechanical and wood pencil leads are graded to distinguish their hardness. • Hard grades range from 4H to 9H. • 9H is the hardest • 4H is the most often used. • Hard leads are used for construction lines. • Medium grade leads are 3H, 2H, H, F, HB, and B. • They are used for general-purpose work. • visible lines • dimensions • sections, and • center lines.

  11. Soft leads range from 2B to 7B, with the larger numbers representing the softer grade. • Used mainly for artwork and architectural renderings.

  12. ENTC 1110 MEDIA

  13. Media are the surfaces used for technical drawings. • Tracing paper, • vellum, and • polyester film.

  14. Tracing paper is a thin, translucent paper used for detail drawing. • Vellum is a tracing paper chemically treated to improve translucency. • Polyester film (Mylar) is transparent, waterproof, and difficult to tear. • Mylar is an excellent drawing surface that leaves no trace of erasure.

  15. ANSI Standard Sheet Sizes

  16. Keeping your drawing surface clean is an important part of technical drawing. • Drawings become dirty primarily from the graphite from the pencils.

  17. To keep a drawing clean: • Never sharpen pencils over your drawing. • Clean your pencil point with a soft cloth after sharpening. • Keep your drawing instruments clean. • Rest your hands on the drawing instrument as much as possible. • When darkening lines, try to work from the top of the drawing to the bottom. • Work from left to right across the drawing. • Work from right to left across the drawing if you are left-handed. • Use a brush to remove erasure particles • Never use your hands.

  18. ENTC 1110 TRIANGLES

  19. Vertical and inclined lines are drawn with triangles. • Triangles come in standard combinations. • 45 degrees • 30 x 60 (30/60) degrees • Triangles come in various sizes. • 6”, • 8”, and • 10”. • By combining the 30/60-degree and the 45 degree triangle, it is possible to draw angles at 15-degree intervals.

  20. Drawing Parallel Lines • When using two triangles, adjust the two triangles until one edge of one triangle is aligned with the given the line, while the other triangle serves as a straightedge and is held stationary. • Slide the aligned triangle along the edge of the stationary triangle. • After the moving triangle is in the new position, draw the line along the same edge that was aligned with the given line.

  21. initial line parallel line

  22. Drawing Perpendicular Lines • When two triangles are used, align the edge of one of the triangles with the given line. • Do not use the hypotenuse (long edge) of the triangle. • Use the other triangle as a straightedge and hold it stationary. • Slide the aligned triangle along the edge of the stationary triangle. • After the moving triangle is in the new position, draw the line, using its perpendicular edge.

  23. ENTC 1110 SCALES

  24. Scales are used to measure distances on technical drawings. • Scales are six to twelve inches long. • Made from wood, plastic, or metal. • Scales are typically triangular allowing a combination of several scales on each side. • The most common scales are: • mechanical engineer’s • civil engineer’s • metric, and • archictectural • A combination scale has engineering, metric, and architectural scales on a single scale.

  25. ENTC 1110 ARCHITECT’S SCALE

  26. For this example, use the 3/4” per foot scale. • This scale has a 3/4 marked at the end. • The feet are read to the right of the zero mark. • Fractions of a foot are measured to the left of the zero mark. • The large numbers (28, 26, 24, ...) near the left end of the scale represent two things: • the number of feet for the 3/8 scale coming from the right end and • the 6” marks for the 3/4 scale.

  27. Align the zero mark on the scale with the start point of the line to be measured. Adjust the scale so that the other end of the line is aligned with the smaller of the two foot mark values, which for this example is 3. 3’-4”

  28. The fractions of a foot are read to the left of zero mark. To determine how many parts a foot has been divided into count the number of short marks long marks. For the example, there are 24 marks to the left of the zero mark. Each mark equals 1/2”. The longer marks represent inches. For this example, the closest mark is the 8 The line is measured as 3’ 4”.

  29. ENTC 1110 CIVIL ENGINEER’S SCALE

  30. The civil engineer’s scale is a decimal scale divided into multiple units of 10. • Commonly used to draw large structures and maps. • Each end of the scale is labeled 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, or 60. • Specifies the number of units per inch. • The 30 scale has 30 units per inch. • The 10 scale is often used as a decimal inch scale.

  31. For the example, use the 20 scale. twenty marks per inch. each mark equals 1/20” Align the zero mark on the 20 scale with the left end of the line to be measured. Determine the closest mark on the 20 scale that corresponds to the right end of the line. For a full-scale drawing the line is 24/20 or 1.2” For half-scale the line is 2.4” For 1” equals 20’ (1” = 20’) the line is 24’.

  32. ENTC 1110 MECHANICAL ENGINEER’S SCALE

  33. The mechanical engineer’s scale is used to draw mechanical parts and is either • fractionally divided into 1/16 or 1/32, or • decimally divided into 0.1 or 0.02

  34. Typically, the other sides of the scale are half size (1/2” = 1”), quarter size (1/4” = 1”), and eight size (1/8” = 1”).

  35. The 16 scale represents an inch divided into 16 equal parts; therefore, • each mark is 1/16”, • every other mark is 1/8”, • every fourth mark is 1/4”, and • every eight mark is 1/2”.

  36. To measure a line, align the zero mark with the left end of the line. • Determine which point on the scale is closest to the right end of the line. • For the example, the length is 1-9/16”.

  37. The 50 scale is commonly used for full-size mechanical engineering drawings because it provides two-decimal-place-accuracy • The ANSI standard calls for such accuracy on all nontoleranced dimensions • The 50 scale divides the inch into 50 parts • Each mark is 0.02”.

  38. To measure a line, align the zero mark with the left end of the line. • Determine which point on the scale is closest to the right end of the line. For this example, assume a line for which the right end is aligned three marks to the left of the small number 12. • The length of the line is read as 2.46”.

  39. Half-size scale • The half-size scale is labeled 1/2at the end. • To the right of zero, each mark represents a full inch; • to the left of zero, there is only one inch and it is marked off in fractions • There are 16 marks in the inch to the left of zero, which means that each mark represents 1/16”. • The longer marks represent 1/8”, 1/4”, and 1/2”increments.

  40. To measure a line, position the scale such that the left end of the line is to the left of zero and is within the inch that is marked off. • (The exact position is not critical in this step.) • While making sure that the left end of the line stays within the marked-off inch to the left of zero, adjust the scale so that the right end of the line is exactly aligned with the closest full inch mark to the right of zero. • Read the full inch mark first; • then read the mark to the left end of the line • The sample line is 3-5/16”.

  41. ENTC 1110 METRIC SCALE

  42. The international organization that establishes the metric standard if the International Standards Organization (ISO). • The system is called the International System of Units, or Systeme Internationale (SI). • The metric system is used to create scaled technical drawings using SI units. • The meter is the base unit. • 1000 millimeter = 1m • 1000 m = 1 kilometer

  43. Each side of the triangular scale has a different metric scale.

  44. 1:1 Full size • 1:2 Half size • 1:5 Fifth size • 1:10 Tenth size • 1:20 Twentieth size • 1:50 Fiftieth size

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