Drafting Exercises
Drafting Exercises
Drafting Exercises
structures, machines, and their component parts that communicates the engineering intent of
a technical design to the craftsman or worker who makes the product.
At the design stage, both freehand and mechanical drawings serve the functions of inspiring and
guiding the designer and of communicating among the designer, collaborators, production
department, and marketing or management personnel. At this stage exact mechanical drawings can
clarify, confirm, or disqualify a scheme that looked promising in a freehand sketch. Actually, both the
sketch and the exact mechanical drawing are essential parts of the process of designing, and both
belong to the field of drafting. After the basic design has been established, drafting skills aid in the
development and transmission of the wealth of data necessary for the production and assembly of the
parts. For an automobile, a skyscraper, or a spacecraft, tens of thousands of drawings may be
needed to convey all of the requirements of the finished product from the designers to the fabricators.
The completion of the set of drawings necessary for the manufacture of a product or the construction
of a project involves three important factors: (1) itemization of every detail and requirement of the final
product or project; (2) application of good judgment and knowledge of standard drafting procedures to
select the combination of drawings and specifications that will convey the information identified in
stage (1) in the clearest possible manner; and (3) deployment of skilled personnel and suitable
equipment to produce the documents specified in stage (2).
Drafting is based on the concept of orthographic projection, which in turn is the principal concern of
the branch of mathematics called descriptive geometry. Although preceded by the publication of
related material and followed by an extensive development, the book Géométrie descriptive (1798)
by Gaspard Monge, an 18th-century French mathematician, is regarded as the first exposition of
descriptive geometry and the formalization of orthographic projection. The growth and development of
the drafting profession were favoured by the application of the concepts published by Monge, the
need to manufacture interchangeable parts, the introduction of the blueprinting process, and the
economy offered by a set of drawings that in most cases made the building of a working model
unnecessary.
Persons with a variety of skills and specialties are essential to the design and implementation of
engineering and architectural projects. Drafting provides communication among them and
coordination of their activities. The designer has primary responsibility for the basic conception and
final solution but depends upon the support of several levels of drafters who prepare graphic studies
of details; determine fits, clearances, and manufacturing feasibility; and prepare the working
drawings. The delineator, or technical illustrator, converts preliminary or final drawings into pictorial
representations, usually perspective constructions in full colour to help others visualize the product, to
inform the public, to attract investment, or to promote sales. Before undertaking their own drawings,
persons entering the profession of drafting may trace drawings to revise or repair them, then advance
to the preparation of detail drawings, tables of materials, schedules of subassemblies (such as doors
and windows), and the dimensioning of drawings initiated by more experienced colleagues. The wide
spectrum of activities demanded of a design team requires that its members combine experience and
creativity with skills in visualization, analysis, and delineation and with knowledge of materials,
fabrication processes, and standards.
The strictly utilitarian objectives of drafting and its emphasis on clarity and accuracy
clearly differentiate it from the allied art form covered in the article drawing. Cartographic drafting is
treated in the articles map and surveying. Some specific applications of drafting are dealt with in the
articles building construction: Modern building practices; interior design; and clothing and footwear
industry.