Free Exercises on Right Angle Projections & Cross Section Views

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around finding free solved exercises related to right angle projections and cross section views in technical drawing. Participants share resources and clarify specific types of sections, particularly focusing on an exploded section view and its terminology.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Homework-related

Main Points Raised

  • One participant seeks free solved exercises on right angle projections and section views, providing links to images for clarification.
  • Another participant suggests contacting the author or publisher of the referenced text due to the narrow nature of the request.
  • A participant identifies a specific type of section as an "exploded section" and recommends searching for technical drawing exercises online or in libraries.
  • There is a discussion about the orientation of the cut line for section views, with emphasis on how it should be aligned to show relevant dimensions clearly.
  • Some participants express uncertainty about finding specific examples for the requested type of section and suggest that practice will help in understanding the appropriate orientations for cut lines.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express varying degrees of uncertainty regarding the terminology and availability of specific examples for the requested section views. There is no consensus on the best approach to find the exercises sought by the original poster.

Contextual Notes

Limitations include the specificity of the request and the potential lack of available resources for the exact type of section view being discussed. The discussion also highlights the dependence on definitions and terminology in technical drawing.

annalian
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I am looking for free solved exercises about: right angle projections, (cross) section views
Here are some pictures of my book so you can understand what I am looking for
http://1.1m.yt/3cNNDl-.jpg
http://1.1m.yt/FekMn6x.jpg
http://1.1m.yt/1t3KEer.jpg
http://1.1m.yt/urA5V2_.jpg
http://1.1m.yt/Cn0hPh0.jpg
http://1.1m.yt/Nh5bfO.jpg
http://1.1m.yt/ovxC1F.jpg
Especially about this last one link I am looking for that type of section at the lower part. I don't understand it and I don't know what is its name in English
 
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This is a really narrow request. It might be best to contact the author or publisher of the text your scanned images came from.
 
annalian said:
Especially about this last one link I am looking for that type of section at the lower part. I don't understand it and I don't know what is its name in English
The one similar to this?

https://goo.gl/images/RZQsdu

I would call it an exploded section.
Searching google for 'technical drawing exercises' might lead to section view exercises. Alternatively, searching your local library for 'technical drawing' or 'drafting' should find some relevant books.
 
billy_joule said:
The one similar to this?

https://goo.gl/images/RZQsdu

I would call it an exploded section.
Searching google for 'technical drawing exercises' might lead to section view exercises. Alternatively, searching your local library for 'technical drawing' or 'drafting' should find some relevant books.
I will translate it: a slope/ slant cross section not horizontal, not vertical, not lateral. Could you find some other examples for this?
 
You're referring to the bottom drawing in the link right?
http://1.1m.yt/ovxC1F.jpg
The isometric view which is exploded about the vertical section plane Z-Z?
I just googled 'exploded section' to find the example I linked, there may be a more correct/descriptive name.
Did you try google or a library?
 
billy_joule said:
You're referring to the bottom drawing in the link right?
http://1.1m.yt/ovxC1F.jpg
The isometric view which is exploded about the vertical section plane Z-Z?
I just googled 'exploded section' to find the example I linked, there may be a more correct/descriptive name.
Did you try google or a library?
This link http://1.1m.yt/Nh5bfO.jpg
The drawing in the end. It is a cross section not horizontal, not vertical, not lateral
 
annalian said:
This link http://1.1m.yt/Nh5bfO.jpg
The drawing in the end. It is a cross section not horizontal, not vertical, not lateral
Ok, not the last link then.
I don't think you'll find specific examples for that sort of section.
With practice, it will become obvious which orientation the cut line should have to show the required information clearly.
e.g. for a flanged pipe elbow such as the one in your link, it should be obvious the cut line should be parallel to the flange for the section view to clearly show the relevant flange dimensions without https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perspective_projection_distortionSo if we were to show a section view of the lower flange in your link the cut line would be horizontal.
 

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