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Chapter 9 Section Views

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Page 1: Chapter 09 section

Chapter 9

Section Views

Page 2: Chapter 09 section

TOPICS

Introduction

Terminology & common practices

Kind of sections

Dimensioning

Page 3: Chapter 09 section

Introduction

Page 4: Chapter 09 section

ObjectObject

GRAPHICS COMMUNICATION WITH ENGINEERING DRAWING

WorkingdrawingWorkingdrawing

Clear ?Clear ?

Orthographicprojection

(convention)

Section viewsconvention

Section Views

Orthographic Projection

Finish

Yes

No

Dimensioning

Page 5: Chapter 09 section

PURPOSES OFSECTION VIEWS

Clarify the views by

Facilitate the dimensioning.

reducing or eliminating the hidden lines.

revealing the cross sectional’s shape.

Let See the example

Page 6: Chapter 09 section

EXAMPLE : Advantage of using a section view.

Page 7: Chapter 09 section

Terminology andcommon practices

Page 8: Chapter 09 section

Cuttingplane

CUTTING PLANE

Cutting plane line

Cutting plane is a plane that imaginarily cuts

the object to reveal the internal features.

Section lines

Page 9: Chapter 09 section

Cutting plane line is an edge view of the cutting

plane.

CUTTING PLANE LINE

Indicate the pathof cutting plane.

Page 10: Chapter 09 section

ANSIstandard

Thick line

Thick line

JIS & ISOstandard

Thin line

CUTTING PLANE LINESTYLES

Viewingdirection

Viewingdirection

Viewingdirection

This course

Page 11: Chapter 09 section

SECTION LINING

Section lines or cross-hatch lines are used to

indicate the surfaces that are cut by the cutting

plane.

Sectionlines

Drawn with 4H pencil.

Page 12: Chapter 09 section

SECTION LINES SYMBOLS

The section lines are different for each of

material’s type.

Cast iron,Malleable iron

Steel Concrete Sand Wood

For practical purpose, the cast iron symbol is

used most often for any materials.

Page 13: Chapter 09 section

SECTION LINING PRACTICE

The spaces between lines may vary from 1.5 mm

for small sections to 3 mm for large sections.

COMMON MISTAKE

Page 14: Chapter 09 section

SECTION LINING PRACTICE

It should not be drawn parallel or perpendicular

to contour of the view.

COMMON MISTAKE

Page 15: Chapter 09 section

Kinds of Sections

Page 16: Chapter 09 section

KIND OF SECTIONS

1. Full section

2. Offset section

3. Half section

4. Broken-out section

5. Revolved section (aligned section)

6. Removed section (detailed section)

Page 17: Chapter 09 section

FULL SECTION VIEWThe view is made by passing the straight cutting

plane completely through the part.

Page 18: Chapter 09 section

OFFSET SECTION VIEWThe view is made by passing the bended cutting

plane completely through the part.

Do not show the edge viewsof the cutting plane.

Page 19: Chapter 09 section

TREATMENT OF HIDDEN LINES

Hidden lines are normally omitted from section

views.

Page 20: Chapter 09 section

HALF SECTION VIEWThe view is made by passing the cutting plane halfway

through an object and remove a quarter of it.

Page 21: Chapter 09 section

HALF SECTION VIEWA center line is used to separate the sectioned half

from the unsectioned half of the view.

Hidden line is omitted in unsection half of the view.

Page 22: Chapter 09 section

The view is made by passing the cutting plane normal

to the viewing direction and removing the portion of an

object in front of it.

BROKEN-OUT SECTION VIEW

Page 23: Chapter 09 section

A break line is used to separate

the sectioned portion from the

unsectioned portion of the view.

BROKEN-OUT SECTION VIEW

There is no cutting plane line.

Break line is a thin continuous

line (4H) and is drawn freehand.

Page 24: Chapter 09 section

EXAMPLE : Comparison among several section techniques

Page 25: Chapter 09 section

Revolved sections show cross-sectional features of a part.

No need for additional orthographic views.

This section is especially helpful when a cross-section varies.

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

Page 26: Chapter 09 section

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

Basic concept

Page 27: Chapter 09 section

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

Basic concept

Page 28: Chapter 09 section

Given

Step 1

a. Assign position of cutting plane.

b. Draw axis of rotation in front view.

Steps in construction

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

Edge view of Edge view of cross-sectioncross-section

Page 29: Chapter 09 section

Steps in construction

Given

a. Transfer the depth dimension to

the front view.

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

Step 2

Page 30: Chapter 09 section

Steps in construction

Given

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

a. Draw the revolved section.

Step 3

b. Add section lines.

Page 31: Chapter 09 section

Steps in construction

Given

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

FINAL PICTURE

Page 32: Chapter 09 section

Placement of revolved section

1. Superimposed to orthographic view.

SuperimposedBreak

2. Break from orthographic view.

REVOLVED SECTION VIEW

Page 33: Chapter 09 section

6. Removed section

Removed section is revolved section.

Used where space does not enough for revolved section

Can be located elsewhere on a drawing with properly labeled

REMOVED SECTION VIEW

Section view is shown outside the view.

Page 34: Chapter 09 section

Example : Revolved vs. removed sections.

Revolved section Removed section

REMOVED SECTION VIEW

Page 35: Chapter 09 section

Example : Situation that removed section is preferred.REMOVED SECTION VIEW

PreferredPoor

Too messy !!

Page 36: Chapter 09 section

Example : Multiple removed section viewsREMOVED SECTION VIEW

A

A

B

B

SECTION A – A

SECTION B – B

Page 37: Chapter 09 section

Dimensioningin Section View

Page 38: Chapter 09 section

In most cases, dimensioning of the section views

follows the typical rules of dimensioning.

GOODPOOR

Page 39: Chapter 09 section

GOODPOOR

50

10

50

10

DIMENSIONING

Page 40: Chapter 09 section

For a half-section view,

use dimension line with

only one arrowhead that

points to the position inside

the sectioned portion.

50

DIMENSIONING