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Orthographic Projection

Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

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Page 1: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

Orthographic Projection

Page 2: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

2Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

© 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458.

All Rights Reserved.

Objectives

• List the six principal views of projection

• Sketch the top, front and right-side views of an object with normal, inclined, and oblique surfaces

Page 3: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

3Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

© 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458.

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Objectives (cont.)

• Understand which views show depth in a drawing that shows top, front, and right-side views

• Know the meaning of normal, inclined, and oblique surfaces

Page 4: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

4Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

© 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ 07458.

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Objectives (cont.)

• Know which dimensions transfer between top, front, and right-side views

• Transfer the depth between the top and right-side views

• Label points where surfaces intersect

Page 5: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

5Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Views of Objects

• Drawings are two-dimensional representations of objects that allow you to record sizes and shapes precisely

• To provide a complete and clear description, the views must be systematically arranged

• The system of views is called multiview projection

Page 6: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

6Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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The Six Standard Views

• Any object can be viewed from six mutually perpendicular views

Page 7: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

7Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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The Six Standard Views

• These views are called principal views and are arranged in a standard way

Page 8: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

8Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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The Six Standard Views

• The top, front, and bottom views align vertically

• The rear, left-side, front, and right-side views align horizontally

• To draw a view out of place is a serious error

Page 9: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

9Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Principal Dimensions

• The three principal dimensions of an object are:• Width• Height• Depth

Page 10: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

10Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Principal Dimensions

• Any principal view shows two of the three principal dimensions

• Height is shown in the rear, left-side, front, and right side

• Width is shown in the rear, top, front, and bottom

• Depth is shown in the left-side, top, right-side, and bottom views

Page 11: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

11Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Example

Page 12: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

12Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Projection Method

• Frontal plane – the plane upon which the frontal view is projected

• Horizontal plane – the plane upon which the top view is projected

• Profile plane – the plane upon which the side view is projected

Page 13: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

13Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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The Glass Box

• One way to understand the standard arrangement of views on a sheet of paper is to envision the object in a glass box

• The outside observer would see six standard views of the object through the sides of this imaginary glass box

Page 14: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

14Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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The Glass Box

Page 15: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

15Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Transferring Depth Dimensions• The depth dimensions in the top

and side views must correspond • You may find it convenient to use

dividers, a ruler, or a 45-degree miter line to project dimensions

Page 16: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

16Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Necessary Views

• A sketch or drawing should only contain the views needed to clearly and completely describe the object• Choose the views that have the fewest

hidden lines and show essential contours or shapes most clearly

• Complicated objects may require more than three views

• Some objects only need one or two views

Page 17: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

17Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Necessary Views

Page 18: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

18Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Necessary Views

Page 19: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

19Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Necessary Views

Page 20: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

20Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Orientation of the Front View• The front view should:

• Show a large surface of the part parallel to the front viewing plane

• Show the shape of the object clearly• Show the object in a usual, stable, or

operating positions

Page 21: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

21Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Orientation of the Front View• When possible, a machine part is

drawn in the orientation it occupies in the assembly

• Usually screws, bolts, shafts, tubes, and other elongated parts are drawn in a horizontal position

Page 22: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

22Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Orientation of the Front View

Page 23: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

23Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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First- and Third-Angle Projection• There are two main systems used for

projecting and unfolding the views:• Third-angle projection which is used in the

United States, Canada and some other countries

• First-angle projection which is primarily used in Europe and Asia

• You should understand both methods

Page 24: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

24Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Third-angle Projection

Page 25: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

25Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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First-angle Projection

Page 26: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

26Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Hidden Lines

• An advantage of orthographic views is that each view shows the object all the way through as if it were transparent• Thick dark lines represent visible features• Dashed lines represent features that

would be hidden behind other surfaces• When possible, choose views that show

features with visible lines

Page 27: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

27Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Page 28: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

28Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Centerlines

• The centerline is used to:• Show the axis of symmetry of a

feature or part• Indicate a path of motion• Show the location for bolt circles or

other circular patterns• The centerline pattern is composed

of three dashes, one long dash on each end with a short dash in the middle

Page 29: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

29Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Centerlines

Page 30: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

30Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Precedence of Lines

• When lines coincide on a drawing the rules of precedence are:• Visible lines always take precedence

over hidden or centerlines• Hidden lines take precedence over

centerlines

Page 31: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

31Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Precedence of Lines

Page 32: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

32Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Visualization

• Even those with experience can’t always look at a multiview sketch and instantly visualize the object represented

• You will learn to interpret lines in a logical way in order to visualize the object as a whole

Page 33: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

33Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Views of Surfaces

• A plane surface that is perpendicular to a plane of projection appears on edge as a straight line

• If a plane is parallel to the plane of projection, it appears true size

• If a plane is angled to the plane of projection, it appears foreshortened

Page 34: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

34Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Views of Surfaces

Page 35: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

35Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Views of Surfaces

• A plane surface always projects either on edge or as a surface in any view• It can appear foreshortened, smaller

than actual size, but it can never appear larger than its true size in any view

Page 36: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

36Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Normal Surfaces

• A normal surface is parallel to a plane of projection

Page 37: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

37Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Inclined Surfaces

• An inclined surface is perpendicular to one plane of projection but inclined to adjacent planes

Page 38: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

38Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Oblique Surfaces

• An oblique surface is tipped to all principal planes of projection and does not appear true size in any standard view

Page 39: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

39Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Edges

• The intersection of two plane surfaces of an object produces an edge which shows as a straight line in a drawing

• If an edge is perpendicular to a plane of projection it appears as a point, otherwise it appears as a line

Page 40: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

40Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Parallel Edges

• When edges are parallel to one another on an object, they will appear as parallel lines in every view unless they align one behind the other

Page 41: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

41Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Angles

• If an angle is in a normal plane, it will show true size on the plane of projection to which it is parallel

• If an angle is in an inclined plane, it may be projected either larger or smaller than the true angle depending on its position

Page 42: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

42Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Angles

Page 43: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

43Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Interpreting Lines

• A straight, visible, or hidden line in a sketch has three possible meanings:• An edge between two surfaces• The edge view of a surface• The limiting element of a curved surface

• Since no shading is used on orthographic views, you must examine all views to determine a line’s meaning

Page 44: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

44Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Interpreting Lines

Page 45: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

45Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Similar Shapes of Surfaces

• If a flat surface is viewed from several different positions, each view will show the same number of sides and vertices and same characteristic shape whenever it appears as a surface• This consistency of shapes is useful in

analyzing views

Page 46: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

46Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Similar Shapes of Surfaces

Page 47: Orthographic Projection. 2 Technical Drawing 13 th Edition Giesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart © 2009 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle

47Technical Drawing 13th EditionGiesecke, Mitchell, Spencer, Hill Dygdon, Novak, Lockhart

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Interpreting Views

• One method of interpreting sketches is to reverse the mental process used in projecting them

• Each view provides certain definite information about the shape of the object and all are necessary to visualize it completely