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Chapter 3-Projections and Views
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Blueprint Reading and Sketching - Intro to drafting and architecture practices
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Isometric Projection

fig. 3-3. It is called central projection because the lines of sight, or projectors, meet at a central point; the eye of the observer. You can see that the projected view of the object varies considerably in size, according to the relative positions of the objects and the plane of projection. It will also vary with the distance between the observer and the object, and between the observer and the plane of projection. For these reasons, central projection is seldom used in technical drawings. If the observer were located a distance away from the object and its plane of projection, the projectors would not meet at a point, but would be parallel to each other.  For  reasons  of  convenience,  this  parallel projection is assumed for most technical drawings and is  shown  in  figure  3-4.  You  can  see  that,  if  the projectors are perpendicular to the plane of projection, a  parallel  projection  of  an  object  has  the  same dimensions as the object. This is true regardless of the relative  positions  of  the  object  and  the  plane  of projection, and regardless of the distance from the observer. ORTHOGRAPHIC AND OBLIQUE PROJECTION An  ORTHOGRAPHIC  projection   is a parallel projection in which the projectors are perpendicular to the plane of projection as in figure 3-4. An OBLIQUE projection is one in which the projectors are other than perpendicular  to  the  plane  of  projection.  Figure  3-5 shows  the  same  object  in  both  orthographic  and oblique projections. The block is placed so that its Figure 3-3.—Central projection. 3-2 Figure 3-4.—Parallel projections. Figure 3-5.—Oblique and orthographic projections. front   surface   (the   surface   toward   the   plane   of projection) is parallel to the plane of projection. You can  see  that  the  orthographic  (perpendicular) projection shows only this surface of the block, which includes only two dimensions: length and width. The oblique projection, on the other hand, shows the front surface and the top surface, which includes three dimensions: length, width, and height. Therefore, an oblique  projection  is  one  way  to  show  all  three dimensions of an object in a single view. Axonometric projection is another and we will discuss it in the next paragraphs.

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