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CVEN2000 2023 Lecture1 Intro Notes

The document discusses the differences between sketches and engineering drawings. Sketches can be freehand or ruled, while drawings are always ruled. Sketches are informal, not to scale, may not have sheet numbers or a title block, and are not legal documents. Engineering drawings are formal, to scale, always have sheet numbers and a title block, and are part of legal contracts.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
76 views19 pages

CVEN2000 2023 Lecture1 Intro Notes

The document discusses the differences between sketches and engineering drawings. Sketches can be freehand or ruled, while drawings are always ruled. Sketches are informal, not to scale, may not have sheet numbers or a title block, and are not legal documents. Engineering drawings are formal, to scale, always have sheet numbers and a title block, and are part of legal contracts.

Uploaded by

Marcmorolla
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Sketches can be free-hand drawn or ruled drawn, i.e. drawn using ruler.
Drawings on the other hand are always ruled drawn in accordance with standard /
guideline

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Differences between sketches and engineering drawings:

Sketches:
• Informal graphics, can be either ruled or free-hand
• Not to scale (although good sketches are done to proportion)
• Do not always have sheet numbers
• Typically does not have (formal) title block
• Not part of legal contract document.

Engineering Drawings:
• Formal graphical presentation in accordance with standard / guidelines
• Are always ruled and done to scale
• Always have sheet number and catalogue
• Always have title block
• Part of legal contract documents

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Note the prefix of the drawing number tells us which discipline the drawing belongs to:

A: Architectural
S: Structural
C: Civil
M: Mechanical
E: Eectrical
P: Plumbing

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See notes on revision numbering in following slides

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International standard of paper size is ISO 216

Ratio of longer side (a) over shorter side (b) of A series is square root of 2, i.e. a/b = 2
Area of A0 is 1 m2
The rest of A series just follows from there, e.g. area of A1 is half of A0

There are also B and C series paper

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Typical numbering of revisions:

Rev. A: Issued for Internal Review


Rev. B: Issued for Client Review
Rev. C: Re-issued for Client Review
Rev. (alphanumeric: ….Re-issued for Review

Rev. 0: Issued for Use or Issued for Construction


Rev. 1: …. Revised

Rev. (numeric) : Issued for Record (As-built drawings)

Note how NSW Transport uses Status instead of Revision

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