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Shipboard Blueprints
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Blueprint Reading and Sketching - Intro to drafting and architecture practices
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Filing and Handling Blueprints

ONBOARD   PLANS   are   those   considered necessary as reference materials in the operation of a ship. A shipbuilder furnishes a completed Navy ship with  copies  of  all  plans  needed  to  operate  and  maintain the ship (onboard plans), and a ship’s plan index (SPI). The SPI lists all plans that apply to the ship except those  for  certain  miscellaneous  items  covered  by standard  or  type  plans.  Onboard  plans  include  only those plans NAVSHIPS or the supervisor of ship building consider necessary for shipboard reference. The SPI is NOT a check list for the sole purpose of getting a complete set of all plans. When there is a need for other plans or additional copies  of  onboard  plans,  you  should  get  them  from your  ship’s  home  yard  or  the  concerned  system command.  Chapter  9001  of  the  Naval  Ships’ Technical Manual (NSTM) contains a guide for the selection of onboard plans. BLUEPRINT NUMBERING PLAN In the current system, a complete plan number has five   parts:   (1)   size,   (2)   federal   supply   code identification number, (3 and 4) a system command number in two parts, and (5) a revision letter. The following list explains each part. 1. The letter under the SIZE block in figure 1-1, view A, shows the size of the blueprint according to a table of format sizes in MIL-STD-100. 2.  The  federal  supply  code  identification  number shows the design activity. Figure 1-1, view A, shows an example under the block titled CODE IDENT NO Figure 1-7.—Line characteristics and conventions for MIL-SDT drawings—Continued. 1-9

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