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CE En 112 Engineering Drawing with CAD Application

CE En 112 Engineering Drawing with CAD Application. Chapter 1: Introduction to Graphics Communication. Lecture Outline. Introduction (1.1 – 1.5, 1.7) What will you learn? (1.9) Drawing tools (1.8) Media (1.8.2) Alphabet of lines (1.6) Scales (1.8.3 – 1.8.5) Next class.

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CE En 112 Engineering Drawing with CAD Application

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  1. CE En 112 Engineering Drawing with CAD Application Chapter 1: Introduction to Graphics Communication

  2. Lecture Outline • Introduction (1.1 – 1.5, 1.7) • What will you learn? (1.9) • Drawing tools (1.8) • Media (1.8.2) • Alphabet of lines (1.6) • Scales (1.8.3 – 1.8.5) • Next class Section numbers shown here apply to Chapter 1 of Textbook (B) from Bertoline-Wiebe-Miller “Fundamentals of Graphics Communication, 3/e)

  3. After completing this chapter, you will be able to: • Describe why the use of graphics is an effective means of communicating when designing • Define standards and conventions as applied to technical drawings • Describe the design process • Identify the important traditional tools used to create technical drawings • Use sketching to draw lines, circles, arcs, and curves • Read and use scales • Identify the types and thickness of the various lines in the alphabet of lines • Create a design sketch using pencil • Identify and use sketching tools • Follow good hand-lettering practice

  4. Introduction (1.1-1.5, 1-7) • Engineers: Creative people who use technical means to solve problems. They design products, systems, devices, and structures to improve our living conditions. (p.4) • Technical Drawings: a clear, precise language (non-verbal) used in the design process for communicating, solving problems, quickly and accurately visualizing objects, and conducting analyses • A graphical representation of objects and structures is done using freehand, mechanical, or computer methods

  5. Introduction (con’t) • 92% of the design process is graphical • The remaining 8% is mathematics and written communication Breakdown of Engineer’s time Who uses engineering graphics? All aspects include graphics communication Fig. 1.1

  6. Introduction (con’t) • Practice Exercise 1.1 • Attempt to describe the part shown in this figure verbally to the person seatednext to you Fig. 1.89 • How easy is it to describe a part such as this without the use of graphics?

  7. Introduction (con’t) An evolving design process: • Traditional: A linear, segmented activity involving problem identification, preliminary ideas, design refinements, analysis, optimization, and documentation • Concurrent: A team activity involving coordination of the technical and non-technical functions of design and manufacturing within a business The CAD database becomes a communication medium. Fig. 1.12 Fig. 1.14 Fig. 1.15

  8. What Will You Learn? (1.9) CE En 112 Manual Drafting

  9. What Will You Learn? (con’t) Artistic drawing vs. Technical drawing What’s the difference?

  10. What Will You Learn? (con’t)

  11. What Will You Learn? (con’t) Multiview vs. Isometric Cavalier vs. Cabinet oblique Perspective vs. Oblique

  12. What Will You Learn? (con’t) Drawing Conventions (1.5): commonly accepted practices, rules, or methods (e.g., dashed line for hidden feature) Standards (1.5): set of rules that govern how technical drawings are represented (e.g., ANSI standards)

  13. Drawing Tools (1.8)

  14. Drawing Tools (con’t) The use of drafting tools

  15. Media (1.8.2) • Media: surfaces upon which an engineer or technologist communicates graphical information. Different types include: • Tracing paper (a thin, translucent paper used for detail drawings) • Vellum (tracing paper chemically treated to improve translucency) • Polyester film (transparent, waterproof, and difficult to tear, “Mylar”) • The American National Standard Institute (ANSI) has established standard sheet sizes and title blocks for media used in technical drawings

  16. Media (con’t)

  17. Alphabet of Lines (1.6) • Pencil Grades • Line Weight Remember that Accuracy, Neatness, and Speed count in technical drawing

  18. Alphabet of lines (con’t)

  19. Alphabet of lines (con’t)

  20. Alphabet of lines (con’t) • AutoCAD®Linetypes ACAD ISO series lines are very large. For this class, use standard line types starting from BORDER to PHANTOM lines. We will see these line types in AutoCAD.

  21. Scales (1.8.3 – 1.8.5) • Civil Engineering Scale

  22. Scales (con’t) • Reading a civil engineer’s scale Refer to the Chapter 1 Supplement for other types of scales.

  23. Next Manual Drafting Lecture (Jan 29) • Purchase drafting tools needed for manual drafting portion of class if you have not done so • Read Chapter 2 in the graphics communication book

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