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Computer-Aided Design/Computer-Aided Manufacturing Cont.
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Blueprint Reading and Sketching - Intro to drafting and architecture practices
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Orthographic and Oblique Projection

CHAPTER  3 PROJECTIONS  AND  VIEWS When you have read and understood this chapter, you should be able to answer the following learning objectives: Describe the types of projections. Describe the types of views. In  learning  to  read  blueprints  you  must  develop the ability to visualize the object to be made from the blueprint (fig. 3-1). You cannot read a blueprint all at once any more than you can read an entire page of print all at once. When you look at a multiview drawing, first survey all of the views, then select one view at a time for more careful study. Look at adjacent views to determine  what  each  line  represents. Each line in a view represents a change in the direction of a surface, but you must look at another view to determine what the change is. A circle on one view may mean either a hole or a protruding boss (surface) as shown in the top view in figure 3-2. When you look at the top view you see two circles, and you must  study  the  other  view  to  understand  what  each represents. A glance at the front view shows that the smaller circle represents a hole (shown in dashed lines), while the larger circle represents a protruding boss. In the same way, you must look at the top view to see the shape of the hole and the protruding boss. Figure 3-1.—Visualizing a blueprint. 3-1 You can see from this example that you cannot read a blueprint by looking at a single view, if more than one view is shown. Sometimes two views may not be enough to describe an object; and when there are three views, you must view all three to be sure you read the shape correctly. PROJECTIONS In blueprint reading, a view of an object is known technically as a projection. Projection is done, in theory,  by  extending  lines  of  sight  called  projectors from the eye of the observer through lines and points on the object to the plane of projection. This procedure will always result in the type of projection shown in Figure 3-2.—Reading views.

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