Lesson Plan
Lesson Plan
Lesson Plan
Unit 6
Isometric Projections
6.1 indicate the principle axes in isometric drawing and must able to create isometric
scale.
6.2 differentiate between Isometric view and Isometric projection.
6.3 present sloping surfaces in isometric drawing
6.4 present cylindrical (circular) and conical surfaces in isometric drawing
6.5 produce an isometric drawing of an objects including solids.
Unit 1 Drawing conventions
Isometric Projections:
An isometric projection doesn’t use 45˚ projection lines; instead it uses 60˚ projection
lines. In addition, you don’t begin an isometric projection by drawing the front view, as
we did with orthographic projections. When drawing an isometric view of an object you
start at a single point, where the front view and side view meet; at this point 30˚ lines are
projected both to the right and left.
An example: would look like
Notice that the lower right corner of both the front and side view is the starting point, and that
both views project off of that point.
When producing an isometric projection, the front view will always project to the left,
and the side view will always project to the right. The scale also remains the same for all
projection lines, there is no such thing as a cabinet view with isometric projections.
Despite this short coming with perspective, isometric drawings are very useful to the
mechanic who needs to utilize the drawing to manufacture whatever is depicted.
Isometric drawings don’t have a changeable scale, so any line can be measured and used
in manufacturing/production.