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- Cutting Plane. A surface cut by the saw in the drawing above is a cutting plane. Actually, it is an imaginary cutting plane taken through the object, since the object is imagined as being cut through at a desired location.
- Cutting Plane Line. A cutting plane is represented on a drawing by a cutting plane line. This is a heavy long-short-short-long kind of line terminated with arrows.
- Section Lining. The lines in the figure above, which look like saw marks, are called section lining. They are found on most sectional views, and indicate the surface which has been exposed by the cutting plane.
- Full Sections. When a cutting plane line passes entirely through an object, the resulting section is called a full section Fig. 7 illustrates a full section.
A half section view means that you are only removing a quarter of an object. This type of view is ordinarily used when the object is symmetrical or if you only need to show a portion of a complex assembly.
- General Principles
- Section Lines and Symbols
- Cutting Planes
- Main Principles of Placement of Sectional Views
A sectional view represents the part of an object remaining after a portion is assumed to have been cut and removed.The exposed cut surface is then indicated by section lines.Hidden features behind the cutting plane are omitted, unless required for dimensioning or for definition of the part.Section lines, or hatching, that represent the cut surface usually consist of thin parallel lines, as shown below, drawn at an angle of approximately 45° to the principal edges or axes of the part. For most purposes, the general use symbol of cast iron is used. When it is desired to indicate differences in materials, for example on assembly drawing...
Cutting plane lines which show where the cutting plane passes through the object, represent the edge viewof the cutting plane and are drawn in the view(s) adjacent to the section view. Here the cutting plane is drawn as an edge in the top view, which is adjacent to the sectioned front view. This is a frontal cutting plane. Lines of sight should alw...
Whenever practicable, and except for revolved sections, you should project sectional views perpendicular to the cutting plane and place it in the normal position for third angle projection.You should never show the views in first angle projected position on a third angle projection drawing.When the preferred placement is not practical you may remove the sectional view to some other convenient position on the drawing, but it must be clearly identified, usually by two capital letters,...Normally, you should not change orientation of the view, but if this becomes necessary, you must state the number of degrees through which it is revolved.May 11, 2024 · THIS VIDEO INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY STEP BY STEP HOW TO DRAW Engineering Drawings:- Isometric View and Left view from Front view and Top view- Half Section I...
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A half section is one-half of a full section. While a full section shows the object as if half has been cut away, a half section shows one-quarter cut away. Imagine that two cutting planes at right angles to each other slice through the object as shown in Figure 8-11A through Figure 8-11C. Figure 8-11D shows the object’s exterior (not in ...
Half Section . The half section view may be used where a part or assembly is symmetrical about the centerline of the part or assembly. This will save space on the drawing with over population of reference and section views.
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A half-section is a view of an object showing one-half of the view in section, as in figure 19 and 20. Figure 19 - Full and sectioned isometric views. Figure 20 - Front view and half section. The diagonal lines on the section drawing are used to indicate the area that has been theoretically cut.