1 / 10

Engineering Design GE121 Design Drawings and Fabrication Specifications

Engineering Design GE121 Design Drawings and Fabrication Specifications. Lecture 15A. Design Drawings, Fabrication Spec’s: Designing Isn’t Building. Design Drawings and Fabrication Specifications are an essential part of reporting in many Design Projects

Télécharger la présentation

Engineering Design GE121 Design Drawings and Fabrication Specifications

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Engineering DesignGE121Design Drawings and Fabrication Specifications Lecture 15A

  2. Design Drawings, Fabrication Spec’s:Designing Isn’t Building • Design Drawings and Fabrication Specifications are an essential part of reporting in many Design Projects • Allows someone you may not even know, to build your design • Must pay attention to the kind of drawings, and different standards associated with Final Design Drawings

  3. Design Drawings • Can include: • Freehand • CADD Models • Sketches • Often include “marginalia” • Notes for the user of the drawing Fig. 6.2 p141

  4. Design Drawings(continued) • Layout Drawings • Working drawings that show the major parts or components, and their relationships • Usually to scale • Do not show tolerances • Subject to change as design process continues Fig. 6.3 p142

  5. Design Drawings(continued) • Detail Drawings • Show Individual parts or components and their relationship • Show tolerances • Indicate materials • Any special processing • Conform with existing Drawing standards • Changed only with a ‘Change Order’ Fig. 6.4 p143

  6. Design Drawings(continued) • Assembly Drawings • Show how the individual parts or components fit together • Exploded view commonly used • Components shown by part number, or on entry in a Bill of Materials Fig. 6.5 p144

  7. Design Drawings(continued) • Bill of Materials • List of parts required to create the artifact • Standards for Drawings • Various standards, depending on discipline • ANSI is a clearing house for various drawing standards for various disciplines

  8. Fabrication Specifications • Set of plans that form the basis on which the designed artifact will be built • Should be: • Unambiguous (role and place or each part unmistakable) • Complete (comprehensive) • Transparent (readily understood) • Allows someone totally unconnected to the design to be able to build it • Our focus in this class is conceptual design – we will not discuss fabrication specifications in detail

  9. Fabrication Specifications (continued) • Many of the components/parts may be purchased from vendors, requiring a great deal of detailed, disciplinary knowledge • Some requirements of fab spec’s can be: • Physical dimensions • Kinds of materials • Unusual assembly conditions • Operating parameters (artifact’s response/behaviour) • Maintenance / Lifecycle requirements • Reliability requirements • Packaging requirements • Shipping requirements • External markings (usage/warning labels) • Unusual or special needs

  10. Philosophical NotesSpecifications / Drawings / Pictures • Type of drawings and level of detail varies by discipline • Schematic often good in electronics, but not in mechanical • Types of drawings have evolved separately in various fields • Visual representation is often much more easily interpreted than written • Photographs may begin to become more important (Google Earth  GIS Systems)

More Related