Module 1 Engineering Drawing
Module 1 Engineering Drawing
Course Description : Drawing instruments and their us; mechanical drawing; applied
Geometry; lettering; Alphabet of lines/ application; orthographic
Projection; Isometric drawing; dimensioning; Scaling; Oblique
Drawing and Sectioning.
General:
It is designed to acquire and develop necessary skills the language of Engineer.
Further, this will encourage them in their own initiative to illustrate and the preparation of
working drawings.
Specific:
1. To enable the students to identify the tools/ instrument needed.
2. To familiarized the student, the proper techniques, manipulation, uses and care of
the drawing instruments.
3. To acquire adequate skills in measuring/ scaling dimension accurately, and basic
lettering styles and numerals used in working drawing.
4. Equipped with the basic analysis skills in orthographic/ isometric/ oblique
drawing.
5. He must observe the basic principles in dimensioning, deal with proper drawing
convention/ symbols, describe the projection process, so that engineering
illustration or working drawings can be created in the same way.
INTRODUCTION
One of the best ways to communicate one's ideas is through some form of picture or drawing.
This is especially true for the engineer. The purpose of this guide is to give you the basics of
engineering sketching and drawing.
"Sketching" and "Drawing" as one. "Sketching" generally means freehand drawing. "Drawing"
usually means using drawing instruments, from compasses to computers to bring precision to the
drawings.
An engineering drawing is a subcategory of technical drawings. The purpose is to convey all the
information necessary for manufacturing a product or a part. Engineering drawings use standardised
language and symbols. This makes understanding the drawings simple with little to no personal
interpretation possibilities. Creating engineering drawings is a whole subject area of its own; there are
whole degrees given in Drafting Technology. It is also a time-honored art form. Drawings are used
all fields of Engineering (Mechanical, Civil, Architectural, Electrical, Aerospace, etc.) The type of
drawings we will be creating in this class are Mechanical, but the concepts are all transferable to the
other Engineering fields.
DEFINITIONS
Types of Drawing
Objectives of Drawing
1. ACCURACY – the ability to acquire precision in the work and Exactness of
measurement must be observed.
2. SPEED – it is the ability of a person to accomplished the task with a certain period of
time.
3.LEGILIBILTY- lettering and should done according to standard so that it
can be read easily it can be easily understand with the observer.
4. NEATNESS – a good drawing is free from erasure, errors and smears.
Fixed head
Parts of T-Square
Triangles
Triangles are used for drawing vertical and inclined lines. They are usually made of celluloid
or plastic and come in various sizes. The commonly used triangles are 45O X 45O triangle and 30O X
60O triangle, when using , the base of the triangle should rest on the blade of the T-square are both
held by the left hand, leaving the right hand free to draw. When drawing a line always start the pencil
at a point near the blade of the T-square proceeding upward.
Triangles
Pencil
The most important tools to a draftsman. They are made of hexagonal shapes to fit the thumb,
forefinger and second finger and to prevent from rolling off the table.
Pencil
Classification of Pencil
Hard Pencil – (7H to 9H) are used where extremely accuracy required, as on graphical
computation charts and diagrams.
Medium Pencil – (3H- B) for general purpose work in technical drawing, are used for technical
sketching, lettering, arrow heads, and other freehand work of mechanical drawing.
Soft Pencil- (2B-7B ) are too soft to be used in mechanical drawing. Their used for such work
results in smudges and rough line which are not distinct and are difficult to ease.
9H 8H 7H 6H 5H 4H 3H 2H H F HB B 2B 3B 4B 5B 6B 7B 8B 9B
Hardest → Medium → Softest
Classes of pencil
Kinds of pencil points
1. Chisel point – for border lines
2. Elliptical point- for compass lead
3. Conical point- for lettering works, and architectural lines.
Protractor
Protractor is used to measure and lay off angles that cannot be measured with 45 x45x 90
degrees triangles and 30 x 60 x 90 degrees triangles. It is a semi-circular shape divided into 180
equal parts, each of which is called a degree ( 0 ).
Protractor
Erasers
Erasers are made of rubber or gum available in a variety of sizes and degree of hardness. Eraser
is used to remove mistakes while committing an error in a drawing. Eraser is used to remove the extra
lines, lines/marks drawn by mistake and to clear soiled spots on the drawing. Only pencil eraser is
used. Soft India-rubber is the most suitable kind of eraser for pencil drawings. The eraser used should
be such that the surface of the drawing paper is not spoiled in anyway. It is desirable to use erasing
shield to protect the nearby lines from being erased. The rubber crumbs formed after erasing should
be swept away with a clean duster and should never be brushed off with hands. Use of eraser should
be minimized by proper planning.
Erasers
Drawing paper Most of the architectural drafting works must be done on this paper.
Selection on the types of paper must be considered. Cactus substance 20 is recommended, it should
be white and fine surface.
Drawing paper
Erasing Shield It is a thin metal or plastic plate cut with slots, circles and curves of
different dimensions. It helps to erase unwanted pencil lines without erasing the surrounding lines.
Erasing Shield
The Compass
The compass is used to draw large arcs and circles. The needle point of the compass should be
slightly longer than the pencil point or pen point. It should be very sharp at all times.
The Compass
French Curves
French curves are used to draw irregular curved lines, which can not be drawn with a compass.
A light pencil curve is first drawn free hand through the known points. Neat continuous curve is finally
drawn with the longest possible curve coinciding exactly with the free hand curve. Proper care must
be taken to ensure that no corners are formed anywhere on the curve. Proper use of French curves
requires skill. French curves are made of transparent celluloid or plastic. These are available in various
shapes. One of the French curves.
French Curves
To draw horizontal lines: press the head of the T-square firmly against the working
edge of the board with your left hand. Then slide your hand to the position shown below figure 1 so
that the blade is press tightly against the paper. Lean the pencil in the direction of the line at an angle
of approxiatemately 60 degrees with the paper and draw line lines from left to right. Keep the pencil
in a vertical plane.
To draw perpendicular to a given line, move the T-square and triangle as a unit until
one edge of the triangle lines up with the given line fig.5. Then slide line. To draw perpendicular lines
when one of the lines make 15° with horizontal, arrangement the triangles as shown.
The two systems used for specifying units of measure are the English and metric systems.
Length:
1foot (ft) = 12 inches (in)
1 yard (yd) = 3 feet
1mile (mi) = 5280 feet
1mile = 1760 yards
Metric Units The basic unit of length in the SI system is the meter. The meter was originally
intended to be one ten-millionth of the distance from the Equator to the North Pole (at sea level). The
meter has since been redefined as the distance travelled by light in a vacuum in 1/299,792,458 seconds
(i.e. the speed of light in a vacuum is 299,792,458 m/sec). Subdivisions of the meter are the millimeter,
centimeter, and the decimeter, while multiples of meters include the decameter, hectometer, and
kilometer.
Test I: IDENTIFICATION: Identify the following sentences and supply the words or group
of words to complete the statement.
1. is rectangular in shape and is made of well-seasoned soft wood such as oak or pine.
2. a Pencil for drawing outlines, Centre lines, Break lines, etc.
3. a Pencil for dimensioning, arrowheads, hatching lines, lettering, sketching, circles, arcs, etc.
4. a pencil for drawing outlines and 0.8 mm for shading and sketching
5. is used to remove the extra lines, lines/marks drawn by mistake and to clear soiled spots on the
drawing.
6. It is composed of a long strip called blade, which is screwed rigidly at right angle to a shorter
piece called head or stock.
7. is a drafting tool used to draw accurate parallel lines, vertical lines, and other angled lines.
8. It is a thin metal or plastic plate cut with slots, circles and curves of different dimensions. It
helps to erase unwanted pencil lines without erasing the surrounding lines.
9. are used to draw irregular curved lines, which cannot be drawn with a compass.
10. are made of wood, steel, celluloid or plastic. Stainless steel scales are more durable.
11. These are made of hard transparent plastic. The edges are either squared or beveled.
12. is almost universally used, it is often referred to as the International System.
13. are used to fix the drawing sheet on the drawing board at the required place.
14. is used for drawing circles and arcs. It consists of two legs hinged together at its upper end.
15. is adjusted by a nut and is very convenient for marking minute divisions and large number of
short equal distances.
Test III: Enumeration: Innumerate the following by supplying the words or group of
words.
1-4 Metric systems of measurements
5-8 English system of measurements
9-12 English, Metric conversion
13-16 English equivalents
17-20 Groups of Pencil
21-25 Basic Instruments
Reproduce the exercises shown in layout 2 with a 5H- grade pencil (see lesson 2 5a- grade of
pencil leads) but do not copy the dimensions and notes. Use a plain sheet of 8 ½ x 13-inch paper point
0 is at the center of the space.
Reproduce the exercises shown in layout 3 with a 5 H- grade pencil but do not copy the
dimensions and notes. Use a plain sheet of 8 ½ x 13-inch paper, with point 0 in the center of the
drawing space. When drawing lines, be careful to hold the T-square and the triangle firmly to prevent
slipping.