Lec 11 Descriptive Geometry
Lec 11 Descriptive Geometry
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Introduction
Most of the concepts of this chapter have already been touched on in prior lectures and exercises. The intent of this lecture to provide another view of the principles and concepts from an analytical standpoint.
Descriptive Geometry
Descriptive geometry is the graphic representation of plane, solid, and analytical geometry used to describe real or imagined technical devices and objects. It is the science of graphic representation in engineering design. Students of technical or engineering graphics need to study plane, solid, analytical, and descriptive geometry because it forms the foundation or grammar of technical drawings.
Fold-Line Method
A variation on the Direct View method. The reference line is moved between the views to represent the folds in a glass box.
Revolution Method
The projectors from the adjacent view are not parallel to the viewing direction (as related to the object) Need to rotate the length information about an axis before projecting it to the new adjacent view.
Reference Planes
The reference plane is perpendicular to the line of sight project lines. It appears as a line in related views. Gives a reference for measuring depth information for related views.
Basic Elements
The basic elements used in descriptive geometry include:
Points Lines Planes
Points
A point has no width, height, or depth. A point represents a specific position in space as well as the end view of a line or the intersection of two lines. The graphical representation of a point is a small symmetrical cross.
Lines
Lines represents the locus of points that are directly between two points. A line is a geometric primitive that has no thickness, only length and direction. A line can graphically represent the intersection of two surfaces, the edge view of a surface, or the limiting element of a surface. Lines are either vertical, horizontal, or inclined. A vertical line is defined as a line that is perpendicular to the plane of the earth (horizontal plane).
Points on a Line
If a point is on a line, it will appear on the line in all views and be at the same location on the line.
Planes
Planes are surfaces that can be uniquely defined by:
Three non-linear points in space, Two non-parallel intersecting vectors, Two parallel vectors, or A line and point not on the line.
Plane Definitions
Plane Classifications
Planes are classified as
Horizontal Vertical
Profile Frontal
Examples
Orthographic representations of planes as they appear in the principle views
Planar surfaces of any shape always appear either as edges or as surfaces of similar configuration
A true-size plane must be perpendicular to the line of sight and must appear as an edge in all adjacent views.
A Corollary to Rule #5
If a plane is true-size then all lines in the plane are true length and all angles are true.
Finding an Angle