Technical drawings are used to communicate engineering designs and include working drawings for production. Shop drawings are 2D detail drawings of each component for fabrication. Assembly drawings are 3D drawings showing all parts assembled with a parts list. Exploded views are 3D drawings showing assembly order. Multiview drawings provide standard 2D views with dimensions and notes. Assembly and exploded views help illustrate the assembly process. Pictorial shaded drawings provide realistic 3D views of assemblies and subassemblies.
Technical drawings are used to communicate engineering designs and include working drawings for production. Shop drawings are 2D detail drawings of each component for fabrication. Assembly drawings are 3D drawings showing all parts assembled with a parts list. Exploded views are 3D drawings showing assembly order. Multiview drawings provide standard 2D views with dimensions and notes. Assembly and exploded views help illustrate the assembly process. Pictorial shaded drawings provide realistic 3D views of assemblies and subassemblies.
Technical drawings are used to communicate engineering designs and include working drawings for production. Shop drawings are 2D detail drawings of each component for fabrication. Assembly drawings are 3D drawings showing all parts assembled with a parts list. Exploded views are 3D drawings showing assembly order. Multiview drawings provide standard 2D views with dimensions and notes. Assembly and exploded views help illustrate the assembly process. Pictorial shaded drawings provide realistic 3D views of assemblies and subassemblies.
Technical drawings are used to communicate engineering designs and include working drawings for production. Shop drawings are 2D detail drawings of each component for fabrication. Assembly drawings are 3D drawings showing all parts assembled with a parts list. Exploded views are 3D drawings showing assembly order. Multiview drawings provide standard 2D views with dimensions and notes. Assembly and exploded views help illustrate the assembly process. Pictorial shaded drawings provide realistic 3D views of assemblies and subassemblies.
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as pptx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 16
Technical Drawings
Ken Youssefi ME dept., SJSU 1
Technical Drawings Working Drawings A set of engineering drawings for the purpose of production and communicating the design to others.
• Shop Drawings (detail drawings) – Two dimensional
multiview drawings of each component for the purpose of fabrication. • Assembly and Subassembly Drawings – three dimensional drawings showing all parts assembled. Parts list or a bill of materials (BOM) should be included. • Exploded View Drawings – three dimensional drawings showing how parts should be assembled.
Ken Youssefi ME dept., SJSU 2
Multiview Standard Drawings – 2D views • Draw at least two orthographic views, three views are common. • Select the most descriptive view as the front view. • Select the sequence of views with the fewest hidden lines. • Leave adequate room between the views for dimensions and notes. • Show all lines: visible, hidden and centerlines. • Dimension all features, avoid over dimensioning. • Include notes to provide more information. • Specify material and heat treatment if required. • Include a standard title block. Title block should include; name, project name, part number, date, scale, units, material, surface roughness, revision, …..
Ken Youssefi ME dept., SJSU 3
2D Technical Drawing - Example
Ken Youssefi ME dept., SJSU 4
Assembly Drawings Normally no dimensions are given in the assembly drawings