Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (2024)

An engineering drawing is a subcategory of technical drawings. The purpose is to convey all the information necessary for manufacturing a product or a part.

Engineering drawings use standardised language and symbols. This makes understanding the drawings simple with little to no personal interpretation possibilities.

So let’s look at the different line and view types you will come across in the engineering discipline.

I The Purpose of Engineering Drawings

II How to Make Drawings?

III Basic Components of an Engineering Drawing

IV Assembly Drawings

V What Does the Future Hold?

The Purpose of Engineering Drawings

As already said, such a technical drawing has all the information for manufacturing a part or welding and building an assembly. The info includes dimensions, part names and numbers, etc. So once a manufacturing engineer gets the drawing, he can start the production process without a second thought.

First, we have to pause for a second and address our own customers here to avoid confusion. The drawings you submit for instant pricing and manufacturing in our system do not need any of this. The same applies to 3D models. CAD files and drawings made according to our design tips include all the necessary information for making your product. The only time we ask for a drawing is if you want to specify tolerances.

Still, knowing all the rules and basics of formatting is an absolute must in the industry, as traditional manufacturing companies still need detailed drawings.

How to Make Drawings?

A few decades ago, you would have had to sit down at a drawing board covered with papers of different size, rulers, callipers, etc. Today, all these instruments are still good for manual drafting but no contemporary manufacturer really wants such drawings.

Why? Because most of the machinery uses CNC systems that can read the information straight from the files and produce a cutting program accordingly. Drawings done by hand would just add a lot of manual work for manufacturing engineers.

So, we are left with only one option really – every engineer should use CAD (computer aided design) software because of its many advantages.

You can, of course, use CAD for making drawings from scratch. But the easier option is to first make a 3D model and create the drawings from that, as the programs generate the views with only a few clicks. All you need to do is add the dimensions. Having models also makes updating the drawings for revisions simple.

Basic Components of an Engineering Drawing

Let’s see what makes up an engineering drawing. A single drawing includes many elements with quite a few variations to each of them. So let’s take a closer look here.

Different Types of Lines

Not every line on an engineering drawing is equal. The different options make it possible to show both visible and hidden edges of a part, centre lines, etc.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (1)

The most common is a continuous line, also known as a drawing line. This represents the physical boundaries of an object. Put simply, these lines are for drawing the objects. The line thickness varies – the outer contour uses thicker lines and inner lines are thinner.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (2)

Hidden lines can show something that would not be otherwise visible on the drawings. For example, hidden lines may show the length of an internal step in a turned part without using a section or a cutout view (we explain both later).

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (3)

Centre lines are used to show hole and the symmetric properties of parts. Showing symmetricity can reduce the number of dimensions and make the drawing more eye-pleasing, thus easier to read.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (4)

Extension lines annotate what is being measured. The dimension line has two arrowheads between the extension lines and the measurement on top (or inside, like in the image above) the line.

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Break lines indicate that a view has been broken. If you have a part that is 3000 mm long and 10 mm wide with symmetric properties, using a break-out makes gives all the info without using as much space.

While a good way for giving information to people, CNC machines need full views in order to cut the parts. Otherwise, the manufacturing engineer has to reconstruct the whole part from the measurements.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (6)

When using a cutout view, the cutting plane lines show the trajectory of the cutout. Here you can see that the A-A cutting line brings both types of holes into the view.

Types of Views

So let’s take a closer look at the different types of views that are often present in a manufacturing drawing. Each serves a certain purpose. Bear in mind that adding views should follow the same logic as dimensioning – include as little as possible and as much as necessary.

A tip for good engineering practice – only include a view if it contributes to the overall understanding of the design.

Isometric View

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Isometric drawings show parts as three-dimensional. All the vertical lines stay vertical (compared to front view) and otherwise parallel lines are shown on a 30-degree angle.

The lines that are vertical and parallel are in their true length. Which means you can use a ruler and the scaling of the drawing to easily measure the length straight from a paper drawing, for example. The same does not apply to angled lines.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (8)

It is important to distinguish the isometric view from a perspective view. A perspective view is an artistic one that represents an object as it seems to the eye. Engineers stay true to the dimensions rather than optical illusions.

Orthographic View

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This is the bread and butter of an engineering drawing. An orthographic view or orthographic projection is a way of representing a 3D object in 2 dimensions.

Thus, a 2D view has to convey everything necessary for part production. This kind of representation allows avoiding any kind of distortion of lengths.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (10)

The most common way to communicate all the information is by using three different views in a multiview drawing:

  • Front view
  • Top view
  • Side view

It may be possible that some additional views are necessary to show all the info. But again, less is more.

The positioning of the views differs a bit regionally. For example, look at the image below to compare the US and ISO layouts.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (11)

The one on the left is called first-angle projection. Here, the top view is under the front view, the right view is at the left of the front view, etc. The ISO standard is primarily used in Europe.

On the right, you can see a third-angle projection. The right view is on the right, top view on the top of the front view, etc. This system is especially popular in the US and Canada.

Flat Pattern

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (12)

If you are making a folded sheet metal part, do not forget to add a flat pattern view. The cutting job comes before bending. When it comes to our customers, the easiest way is just to upload a STEP file without any accompanying drawings.

Creating a flat pattern view is usually pretty simple. Just be aware that you are using the sheet metal environment when making sheet metal parts in CAD. There you have the option to “generate a flat pattern” which you can easily add to the main drawing.

If you are using the standard part environment, the same option is not available. Still, many CAD programs have the possibility to convert a standard part into sheet metal if the part properties correspond to sheet metal (e.g. uniform thickness, inside radius, etc.).

Section View

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (13)

A section view can easily display some of the part features that are not evident when looking just from the outset. Cross section is the preferred option compared to hidden lines as it brings more clarity. The cross hatching feature is and indicator for cross sectional views.

Cutout View

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This is the same image we used for illustrating the section view. With one slight difference – the side view includes cutouts. Cutouts can reduce the number of different views on a single drawing.

Thus, we could easily delete the section view and add all the necessary dimensions to cutouts.

Detail View

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (15)

The detail view gives us a close-up of a selected section of a larger view. This can be especially useful if an otherwise large part includes many important dimension in a small area. Using the detail view improves the readability of these measurements.

Auxiliary View

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (16)

An orthographic view to represent planes that are not horizontal or vertical. It helps to show inclined surfaces without any distortion.

Dimensions

As said before, new CNC machines are actually able to read the dimensions straight from the lines. But a traditional manufacturing drawing shows all the necessary dimensions for producing the parts.

The keyword here is necessary. Avoid using the auto-dimensioning feature that a lot of CAD programs offer because they tend to show everything they can find. For a beginner, it may seem like adding it all ensures that no mistakes can be made.

Actually, it can result in a confusing web of measurements that is left for the manufacturing engineer to untangle. Also, adding all dimensions you can find makes it hard to pinpoint which ones are the most important.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (17)

The image above shows a shaft with all the measurements. In reality, it creates a closed system whereby the manufacturer cannot guarantee all these dimensions 100%. Therefore, you have to determine the most important ones. In our case, we chose the end steps to be more important than the length of the central part. Thus, we should delete the 120 mm dimension.

One crucial bit of information that is missing from CAD models is . For example, when looking to produce a shaft for a bearing system, limits and fits are of high importance. The right dimensions can guarantee a longer lifetime with less maintenance.

While you can fetch all the dimensions automatically by clicking the measure button, adding engineering tolerances needs manual action.

Therefore, adding dimensions with lower and upper limits or fit classes is still important. Regarding Fractory’s service, we would ask you to enclose a separate drawing with these parameters. Note that you do not have to provide the whole dimensioning – only include the tolerances of a single hole on your engineering drawings if necessary.

Information Blocks

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (18)

The little boxes in the bottom right corner show additional information. The title block includes the author’s name, part name, part number, quantity, coating, scale, etc. There can be much more info on there but the title blocks vary widely between different companies.

Information blocks also include a bill of materials, or BOM for short. These blocks list all the components used in the assembly, along with additional information like quantities, part names, etc.

Assembly Drawings

Many engineers’ drawings make the mistake of trying to include all the information about each individual part in an assembly drawing. To avoid this, remember the purpose of these engineering drawings during the creation process – they must make the assembling easy.

Exploded views, section views, numbered parts, general dimensions, cutouts, detail views (or close-ups) are all tools you can use to achieve this goal.

It should be clear where each part goes and how it is attached – whether it needs welding, bolted connections, riveting or something else. The bill of materials is there to help you, so make sure the information available there is correct regarding part numbers, names and quantities.

Keeping everything above in mind will help you create assembly drawings that make life easier on the shop floor. A piece of great advice I once received goes like this – keep the thinking in the drawing-room. Avoiding multiple interpretation possibilities at later steps will significantly decrease the number of errors.

What Does the Future Hold?

Engineering drawings are still a big part of an engineer’s job. All in all, making them contributes to about 20% of a design engineer’s work time.

We at Fractory are trying to save this time by automating the reading of 3D models for production. This leaves engineers with the task of producing assembly and GD&T drawings only. The purpose is to keep the focus on engineering better products.

The engineering community is seeing this movement as a new trend. But as we all know, taking the whole industry up to a new standard takes a lot of time. Thus, if you still outsource your production to manufacturing companies who need drawings, you must know the basics at the very least.

Leaving room for interpretation creates a situation where your idea may not be executed as planned. And there is nobody else to blame but the author.

So consider this stage of the product development process as an integral part that requires thinking along. Keep the thinking in the drawing-room.

Engineering Drawing Views & Basics Explained | Fractory (2024)

FAQs

What are different views in engineering drawing? ›

The most common way to communicate all the information is by using three different views in a multiview drawing: Front view. Top view. Side view.

What are the 7 categories of technical drawing? ›

  • Technical Drawings and their Types.
  • General layout drawing.
  • Layout drawing.
  • General arrangement drawing.
  • Detail drawing.
  • Assembly drawing.
  • Erection drawings.
  • Process flow diagram.
8 Mar 2017

What are the 3 types of views in blueprints? ›

Types of blueprint drawings

Blueprints come in three major varieties: plan view drawings, elevation view drawings, and section view drawings.

What is 1st angle projection? ›

What is a First Angle Projection? The First Angle Projection schema imagines the object in the first quadrant. One can place an object on the top of the horizontal plane and at the front of the vertical planes. The first angle projection is utilized mostly in India and various European countries.

What is RF in engineering drawing? ›

A representative fraction (RF) is the ratio of distance on the map to distance on the ground.

Why are three views used to show the object? ›

Complex designs require a three view orthographic drawing. Show the object as it would appear to a person looking directly at the object. They are commonly used to communicate designs to people who do not understand or use orthographic drawings. The most common type of pictorial drawing used.

What are the 12 types of lines? ›

Terms in this set (12)
  • Object lines. shows the contour or outline of objects.
  • Hidden lines. represents features that are hidden in current view.
  • Centerlines. locates the center of circles and arcs.
  • Extension lines. show the extinct of a dimension.
  • Dimension lines. ...
  • Leader lines. ...
  • Cutting-plane lines. ...
  • Viewing-plane lanes.

What are the 10 types of lines? ›

There are many types of lines: thick, thin, horizontal, vertical, zigzag, diagonal, curly, curved, spiral, etc. and are often very expressive. Lines are basic tools for artists—though some artists show their lines more than others.

What are the 4 main types of engineering drawing? ›

The types of drawings associated with each stage of a construction project are briefly described in the following paragraphs. There are four fundamental drawings of a civil engineering project, namely; the tender drawing, the contract drawing, the working drawing, and the complete drawing.

What are the 3 types of drawing? ›

Types of Drawing

They can be broken down into three different types: realistic, symbolic, and expressive modes of drawing.

What are the 2 types of drawing? ›

There are two types of drawings. The first is a drawing done without instruments, known as a sketch. The second is a drawing done with instruments, known as a final drawing. Sketch Final drawing Artistic drawings convey an idea, feeling, mood or situation.

How do you read GD&T drawings? ›

If the arrow points to a diametric dimension, then the axis is controlled by GD&T. If the arrow points to a surface, then the surface is controlled by GD&T. The arrow is optional and may not be present on some drawings. This is where geometric control is specified.

What are the 3 views of isometric drawing? ›

You may be wondering about the three views that are hidden. They are called the Bottom View, the Left Side View, and the Rear View.

What is a 3 view sketch? ›

Three View Drawings - YouTube

What are the 4 types of views? ›

There are total four types of views, based on the way in which the view is implemented and the methods that are permitted for accessing the view data. They are - Database Views, Projection Views, Maintenance Views, and Helps Views,.

What is drawing view? ›

A view created by sketching a line that defines a plane used to cut through a part or assembly. You draw the cutting line when you create the view, or select it from a sketch associated to the parent view. The cutting line can be a single straight segment or multiple segments.

What is a two view drawing? ›

Last Updated on Sun, 01 Aug 2021. Simple, symmetrical flat objects and cylindrical parts, such as sleeves, shafts, rods, or studs, require only two views to show the full details of construction. The two views usually include the front view and either a right side or left side view or a top or bottom view.

What is a projection symbol? ›

The projection symbol used to represent third angle projection shows what you would see when looking at the cone from the left, drawn sitting to the left of the drawing of the front face of the cone. AS 1100 recommends the use of third angle projection.

Why 3rd angle projection is used? ›

3rd Angle project is where the 3D object is seen to be in the 3rd quadrant. It is positioned below and behind the viewing planes, the planes are transparent, and each view is pulled onto the plane closest to it. The front plane of projection is seen to be between the observer and the object.

What is meant by isometric drawing? ›

isometric drawing, also called isometric projection, method of graphic representation of three-dimensional objects, used by engineers, technical illustrators, and, occasionally, architects.

What is VP and HP? ›

Following abbreviations, symbols and notation will be used in the entire course. VP. - Vertical plane. HP. - Horizontal plane.

What is the unit of RF? ›

Radio frequency is measured in units called hertz (Hz), which represent the number of cycles per second when a radio wave is transmitted. One hertz equals one cycle per second; radio waves range from thousands (kilohertz) to millions (megahertz) to billions (gigahertz) of cycles per second.

What is isometric scale? ›

A radiopaque strip of metal calibrated in centimeters, placed between the buttocks of an individual to be x-rayed, used to measure anteroposterior diameters of the pelvis.

What is 1st & 3rd angle projection? ›

In third-angle projection, the view of a component is drawn next to where the view was taken. In first-angle projection, the view is drawn on the other end of the component, at the opposite end from where the view was taken.

What is top view and front view? ›

Front view of an object shows the width and height dimensions. Page 7. Horizontal plane of projection. Horizontal plane of projection is the plane onto which the Top View of the multi-view drawing is projected. Top view of an object shows the width and depth dimensions.

What is the top view called? ›

What you see when you look at something from directly above. Here is a top view of a camera. Also called a Plan View.

What is called line? ›

A line is a one-dimensional figure, which has length but no width. A line is made of a set of points which is extended in opposite directions infinitely. It is determined by two points in a two-dimensional plane. The two points which lie on the same line are said to be collinear points.

What is zigzag line used for? ›

The indicator is used to help identify price trends. It eliminates random price fluctuations and attempts to show trend changes. Zig Zag lines only appear when there is a price movement between a swing high and a swing low that is greater than a specified percentage—often 5%.

What are the 4 types of line? ›

There are two basic lines in Geometry: straight and curved. Straight lines are further classifies into horizontal and vertical. Other types of lines are parallel lines, intersecting lines and perpendicular lines.

What is shape in drawing? ›

Shape is a flat area surrounded by edges or an outline. Artists use all kinds of shapes. Geometric shapes are precise and regular, like squares, rectangles, and triangles. They are often found in human-made things, like building and machines while biomorphic shapes are found in nature.

What are the 7 types of line? ›

The different types of lines are as mentioned below:
  • Straight line.
  • Curved line.
  • Horizontal line.
  • Vertical line.
  • Parallel lines.
  • Intersecting lines.
  • Perpendicular lines.
  • Transversal line.

What are the 5 basic kinds of lines? ›

There are 5 main types of lines in art: vertical lines, horizontal lines, diagonal lines, zigzag lines, and curved lines. Other types of lines are simply variations of the five main ones.

What is isometric and orthographic view? ›

Isometric: a method of representing three-dimensional objects on a flat surface by means of a drawing that shows three planes of the object. Orthographic: a method for representing a three-dimensional object by means of several views from various planes.

What is the 3 most important parts of an engineering drawing? ›

Common features
  • Geometry – the shape of the object; represented as views; how the object will look when it is viewed from various angles, such as front, top, side, etc.
  • Dimensions – the size of the object is captured in accepted units.
  • Tolerances – the allowable variations for each dimension.

What is orthographic projection *? ›

An orthographic projection is a method for creating a two-dimensional representation of a three-dimensional object by projecting 3 different views of the object onto an orthogonal, or perpendicular, plane.

What are the 5 basic skills of drawing? ›

The five basic skills include the ability to recognize edges, understand the proportion, perspective of drawing, different colour schemes and putting the thought together.

What are the 5 type of drawing? ›

There are different types of drawing:
  • STILL LIFE DRAWING. Still life drawing is the drawing of man – made objects. ...
  • LIFE DRAWING. Life drawing is the drawing of human beings and other living things.
  • LANDSCAPES DRAWING. ...
  • NATURE DRAWING. ...
  • IMAGINATIVE DRAWING.
17 Aug 2021

What is layout in drawing? ›

1. Layout Drawing. A layout drawing depicts design development requirements. It is similar to a detail, assembly, or installation drawing, except that it presents pictorial, notational, or dimensional data to the extent necessary to convey the design solution used in preparing other engineering drawings.

What are the elements of drawing? ›

The seven elements are line, color, value, shape, form, space, and texture.

Who is the founder of drawing? ›

Drawing became significant as an art form around the late 15th century, with artists and master engravers such as Albrecht Dürer and Martin Schongauer (c. 1448-1491), the first Northern engraver known by name. Schongauer came from Alsace, and was born into a family of goldsmiths.

How is GD&T calculated? ›

Diametrical Actual Tolerance = 2 X under root (0.15) square + (0.00) square. Therefore actual GD&T Position Tolerance measured against 0.25 is 0.30. The part is rejected. Now calculate bonus tolerance = ( LMC Diameter - Actual Diameter ) = (4.20 – 4.10) = 0.10.

What is MMC and LMC in GD&T? ›

MMC is the condition of a feature which contains the maximum amount of material, that is, the smallest hole or largest pin, within the stated limits of size. LMC is the condition in which there is the least amount of material, the largest hole or smallest pin, within the stated limits of size.

What are GD&T symbols? ›

Geometric dimensioning and tolerancing (GD&T) is a system of symbols used on engineering drawings to communicate information from the designer to the manufacturer through engineering drawings. GD&T tells the manufacturer the degree of accuracy and precision needed for each controlled feature of the part.

What are different types of views in drawing? ›

Types of Drawing Views
  • Base View. The first view created in a drawing. ...
  • Projected View. An orthographic or isometric view that is generated from a base view or other existing view. ...
  • Auxiliary View. A view projected perpendicular to a user-selected line or edge. ...
  • Section View. ...
  • Detail View. ...
  • Overlay View. ...
  • Draft View.
8 Feb 2016

What are the 6 views of orthographic drawing? ›

surfaces of the object positioned so that they are parallel to the sides of the box, six sides of the box become projection planes, showing the six views – front, top, left, right, bottom and rear.

How many types of views are there in AutoCAD? ›

There are two types of viewports in AutoCAD. Model Space viewports and Layout space viewports. Viewports are areas that display different views of your drawing and/or model.

What is drawing view? ›

A view created by sketching a line that defines a plane used to cut through a part or assembly. You draw the cutting line when you create the view, or select it from a sketch associated to the parent view. The cutting line can be a single straight segment or multiple segments.

What are the four different types of view? ›

There are total four types of views, based on the way in which the view is implemented and the methods that are permitted for accessing the view data. They are - Database Views, Projection Views, Maintenance Views, and Helps Views,.

What is RF in engineering drawing? ›

A representative fraction (RF) is the ratio of distance on the map to distance on the ground.

What is the most commonly used views for drawings? ›

The most commonly used are the orthographic projection and the isometric projection.
  • 2.1 Orthographic Projection. Orthographic projection is widely used for fabrication and construction type drawings, as shown in Figure 1. ...
  • 2.2 Isometric Projection. ...
  • 2.3 Parallel Line Development. ...
  • 2.4 Radial Line Development.

What are the 3 views of isometric drawing? ›

You may be wondering about the three views that are hidden. They are called the Bottom View, the Left Side View, and the Rear View.

What are the 3 main orthographic views? ›

An orthographic projection is a way of representing a 3D object by using several 2D views of the object. Orthographic drawings are also known as multiviews. The most commonly used views are top, front, and right side.

What is a two view drawing? ›

Last Updated on Sun, 01 Aug 2021. Simple, symmetrical flat objects and cylindrical parts, such as sleeves, shafts, rods, or studs, require only two views to show the full details of construction. The two views usually include the front view and either a right side or left side view or a top or bottom view.

What is view and types of views? ›

Views are used to restrict data access. A View contains no data of its own but it is like a window through which data from tables can be viewed or changed. The table on which a View is based is called BASE Tables. There are 2 types of Views in SQL: Simple View and Complex View.

What are primary views? ›

Primary View means a visual scene from a single fixed vantage point or location within the primary viewing location or area that is not significantly impaired by vegetation. Sample 1.

What are the 2 types of drawing? ›

There are two types of drawings. The first is a drawing done without instruments, known as a sketch. The second is a drawing done with instruments, known as a final drawing. Sketch Final drawing Artistic drawings convey an idea, feeling, mood or situation.

What is 1st angle projection? ›

What is a First Angle Projection? The First Angle Projection schema imagines the object in the first quadrant. One can place an object on the top of the horizontal plane and at the front of the vertical planes. The first angle projection is utilized mostly in India and various European countries.

What is orthographic projection *? ›

An orthographic projection is a method for creating a two-dimensional representation of a three-dimensional object by projecting 3 different views of the object onto an orthogonal, or perpendicular, plane.

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