![]() I feel with digital data that this may be eventually revised. Of textual content need not have an entry in the Pictorials, cable assemblies, and tabulated and otherĭrawings not prepared to any scale, the word “NONE” ![]() For example:Ĥ.23.3 Drawings Not to Scale. Predominate scale shall be entered directly below the Scale of each view or section drawn to other than the Ratio, or decimal are indicated as examples below. The options for depicting scale, fraction, Shall be entered after “SCALE” in the space provided For multisheetĭrawings, the predominant scale used for each sheet Sections are drawn shall be entered after “SCALE” in The scale to which the majority of views and Which drawings are prepared shall be indicated on theĭrawing. It is desirable, whenever practicable, thatĭetail drawings be prepared to the same scale as pertinentĤ.23.2 Indication of Scale. Practicable, drawings may be prepared to reduced orĮnlarged scale. Drawings shall be drawn to a scale thatĭepicts all details of the item clearly and accurately,Ĥ.23.1 Selection of Scale. Scale expresses the ratio of the object size as drawn NX8.0, Solidworks 2014, AutoCAD, Enovia V5 RE: Remove scale? ewh (Aerospace) 15 Jan 15 17:51 Sure it's not going to be used to actually scale from practically speaking, but it gives context from which all subsequent labels are understood. Otherwise what units is the scale in? "This view is 4x size of the base view" is a lot more words than "4x" and if your "4x" isn't indicative of the 'mutually understood' full-scale (1 paper = 1 part ) (or whatever unit that's declared) then you have to explain it, and that is not something that should have to be explained. I don't know that there is an unambiguous, clear, and logical method to convey relation between views without declaring the first view to be at a certain physical scale. It's not so much about "one inch on paper equals 12 inches of part" but more about relation at the bare minimum. At the least, a relationship of 'child views' to the base view is necessary, imo. ![]() It's sometimes not obvious that a section or detail is blown up 2x, 4x, etc. If you have views at different scales, it's rather important. ![]()
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