Professional Documents
Culture Documents
1.
Each dimension should be given clearly, so that it can be interpreted in only one
way.
2.
3.
4.
Dimensions should be given so that it will not be necessary for the machinist to
calculate, scale, or estimate any dimension.
5.
Dimensions should be attached to the view where the shape is best shown. This
is most frequently the front view.
6.
7.
8.
Dimensions should not be placed upon a view unless clearness is promoted, and
long extension lines are avoided.
9.
10.
11.
In machine drawings, omit all inch marks, except when necessary for clearness;
for example, 1 VALVE.
12.
A dimension should be attached to only one view: extension lines should not
connect two views.
13.
14.
Avoid a complete chain of detail dimensions; better to omit one. Otherwise, add
REF (reference) to one detail dimension, or to the overall dimension.
15.
16.
17.
18.
Dimension lines should not cross extension lines; extension lines may cross each
other.
19.
When extension lines cross other extension lines, no break should be made in
either line.
20.
A center line may be extended and used as an extension line, in which case, it is
still drawn as a center line.
21.
22.
Leaders for notes should be straight, not curved, and pointing to the circular
views of holes whenever possible.
23.
Leaders should slope at 45, 30, or 60 degrees with horizontal text, but may be
made at any angle except vertical or horizontal.
24.
25.
Dimension figures should be 1/8 high for whole numbers, and 1/4" high for
fractions.
26.
27.
Extension lines should not touch object lines, and should extend roughly 1/8
beyond dimension lines.
28.
29.
30.
The letter R should always follow a radius dimension figure. The radial
dimension line should have only one arrowhead, and it should touch the arc.