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Explore detailed auxiliary views for your weekend cabin retreat project, ensuring precise shapes and sizes. Learn how to identify true lengths, points, edges, and angles in multiview drawings.
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Weekend Cabin Retreat ProjectAuxiliary Views Sacramento City College EDT 51 Kenneth Fitzpatrick, P.E. EDT 51 - Auxiliary Views
Multiview Drawings • Principal views of multiview drawings are top, front and side views. • These views are normally adequate for describing the shape and size of most objects. • Objects which have features which are not in these principle planes need auxiliary views to adequately describe them. EDT 51 - Auxiliary Views
Auxiliary Views • Auxiliary views provide the following basic information for features appearing on other than principal surfaces: • true length of a line • identifying the point view of a line • finding the edge view of a plane • determining the true size of a plane. • Finding the true angle between planes. EDT 51 - Auxiliary Views
Auxiliary Views • Auxiliary views are projected from orthographic views • horizontal (top) • frontal (front) • profile (right) EDT 51 - Auxiliary Views
Primary Auxiliary Views • A primary auxiliary view is a first, or direct projection of an inclined surface. • It is projected perpendicularly to one of the principal orthographic views. • A primary auxiliary view is perpendicular to only one of the principal views. EDT 51 - Auxiliary Views