Dimensioning Best Practices For Mechanical and Architectural Drawings
Dimensioning Best Practices For Mechanical and Architectural Drawings
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Just adding dimensions in a drawing is not always sufficient and if you want
the machinist, architect or stakeholders to read your drawing exactly the
same way every time then you should follow the dimensioning best practices
as outlined in this article.
The source of most of these mechanical best practices (but not all) is ASME
Y14.5 M – 2018.
For most of the Architectural drawing best practices, the source is National
CAD Standards (NCS, USA).
Mechanical Drawings
This list contains 36 best practices related to mechanical drawings.
Best Practice 1
Here dimensions marked in the red box are not required and should be
omitted.
Best Practice 2
Also, add dimensions with the correct scale so that no scale conversion is
required to infer the dimension.
Best Practice 3
Dimensions should be added to the view which shows the shape of the part
clearly.
Best Practice 4
Don’t place dimensions directly on the object view unless it makes the
drawing clearer.
Best Practice 5
Avoid dimension with reference to the hidden lines of the drawing view and
place it with respect to center lines.
Best Practice 6
The largest dimension value should be placed furthest from the object so
that smaller dimensions can be placed relatively closer to the object making
the overall dimensioning clear.
Best Practice 7
One dimension should be attached to only one view of the drawing, don’t
attach one dimension to multiple views using extension lines.
Best Practice 8
Best Practice 9
Never cross the dimension lines and avoid crossing extension lines as well,
you can however cross extension lines if at all necessary.
The prefix ⌀ should be added before the diameter value like ⌀18 and the R
prefix before the radius like R36.
Best Practice 11
The radius dimension should contain only one arrowhead and it should touch
the arc.
Best Practice 12
Use jogged extension lines for the radius dimension if the center of the arc
falls outside the sheet or if it is in another view.
Best Practice 13
Best Practice 14
Extension lines should not directly start from the part and there should be a
gap of nearly 1/16″ from the object.
Extension lines should be extended nearly 1/8″ beyond dimension lines.
Best Practice 15
Best Practice 16
Centerline can be used as an extension line but it should retain the properties
of a centerline and not of an extension line.
Don’t use the centerline from one view for another view as well.
Best Practice 17
Best Practice 18
Align dimensions in one line and group dimension lines as much as possible
instead of staggering them.
Best Practice 19
Text and other notes should be placed horizontally in the drawing and not
inclined to any angle or in a verticle direction.
Best Practice 20
Dimension text size should be 1/8″ for whole numbers and for fractions it
should be 1/4″ for every number.
Best Practice 21
Never show hidden lines in the isometric drawing views but show the
tangent lines.
Leader lines should slope at angles close to 30, 45 or 60 degrees but they can
be made at any angle except horizontally and vertically.
The landing of the leader line should be a straight line and not curved.
Best Practice 23
Use leader line with a note to show chamfer distance and angle.
Best Practice 24
When your drawing contains several rough features like fillets or chamfers of
the same size then instead of dimensioning all the features add dimension to
one and specify the number of times it is repeated in the drawing using the X
symbol.
You can also specify these dimensions using a note in the drawing as well.
The “Typical” abbreviation is also widely used for these types of features but
the use of the “Typical” abbreviation is not recognized by ASME Y14.5 – 2018.
So, try avoiding TYP or Typical notation with several similar dimensions as it
says nothing about the number of times a feature is repeated and hence it
can be in some cases interpreted in more than one way.
Best Practice 25
Place the first dimension nearly 1/2″ (∼12.7 mm) away from the object and add
all stacked dimensions nearly 3/8″ (∼9.6 mm) from the nearest dimension.
Best Practice 26
The dimension for a hole created with boring, drilling or other manufacturing
processes should be mentioned by a note connected to a leader line where
the arrow of the leader is pointed towards the center of the hole.
The manufacturing process can be added in the drawing as a note and not
necessarily accompanied by the hole dimension.
Best Practice 29
Surface finish marks should be placed on the edge of the finished surface.
Best Practice 30
In metric drawing if the number is less than 1 include leading zero like 0.32
but in imperial drawing omit leading zero like .25″.
Show trailing zeros in imperial drawings like .320″ and 2.70″ and don’t show
trailing zeroes in metric drawings like 0.84 and 3.4
Best Practice 31
Don’t include unit with all dimensions instead add a note specifying the unit
of the drawing like “Unless otherwise specified, all dimensions are in mm“.
Add unit in the drawing only when it is clearly necessary like labelling size of a
component which is in a different unit as an example 1/2” hose.
Best Practice 32
Don’t assume that parts in a drawing are symmetrical even if they look alike.
Best Practice 33
If the view is overcrowded with different dimensions, two and more separate
drawings with the same view can be produced.
Best Practice 34
In the following image, the lower-left point is the origin or point zero for both
horizontal and vertical direction and all other dimensions are measured with
respect to that point.
Best Practice 35
The height of the keyseat and keyway itself is not dimensioned rather it is
dimensioned with respect to the shaft or hole.
For keyseat, dimension is from the bottom of the keyseat to the other end of
the shaft and for keyway, it is from the top of the keyway to the bottom of the
hole.
Best Practice 1
Use architectural tick as arrow style as it’s one of the most popular ones used
on drawings and easily recognizable.
Though there is no set standard when it comes to using arrow style and as
per National Cad Standards (USA), you can use either architectural tick or
even solid arrow that is popularly used in mechanical drawings.
Best Practice 2
Be consistent when using arrow style and only use one arrow style
throughout the drawing.
Also, make sure ticks of architectural tick is in the same direction on the
dimension line.
Best Practice 3
Add more than sufficient dimensions in the drawing for clarity but don’t over-
dimension your drawing leaving no room for adjustments on the site.
On the other hand, don’t add very few dimensions leaving most of the
planning to guesswork.
Best Practice 4
Architectural drawings are usually not made with very tight tolerances so
maximum precision floats around ¼” and in some commercial buildings it
can go up to 1/8”.
The dimension fractions should not be added in increments less than 1/16” as
per National Cad standards.
Best Practice 6
Best Practice 7
The outermost dimension furthest away from the drawing is the overall
dimension followed by the dimension of critical components like wall
locations and distance of doors and windows.
Lastly, minor details like fixture and cabinetry distances are added in the third
line of the dimension which is nearest to the drawing.
Best Practice 8
In drawings use sans serif fonts to improve clarity, this is as per the National
Cad Standard recommendation.
Serifs are fonts with overhangs that may not look clean on an architectural
drawing and sans serif are fonts without serifs or overhangs.
In the following image yellow highlights are the overhangs that make a font
“serif”.
Best Practice 9
As per National Cad Standard, minimum dimension text size should not be
less than 3/32” (2.5 mm) in CAD drawings and it should not be less than 1/8”
(3.2 mm) on hand-drafted drawings.
Best Practice 10
For dimensions more than an inch you should add it in the form of feet and
inch both and not only in inches.
If, however, local building codes mandate adding dimensions in inches then
you can add it in inches only.
For example, add 1’4” as dimension, not 16” even though they are the same.
Best Practice 12
Columns, fixtures (like toilet, sink etc) and openings like doors and windows
are dimensioned from their centre.
Columns are often the first place where dimensioning should start in a
drawing.
Best Practice 13
We usually use dimeter for the circle and radius for dimensioning an arc.
Best Practice 15
Aligned dimension text should face the bottom and right side and hence the
reading direction is from left to right and bottom to top.
The dimension text is placed above and on the left side of the dimension line.
Best Practice 16
Exterior dimensions are added from the exterior face of the stud to the centre
mark of openings like doors or windows.
We ignore the finish material thickness on the walls as it’s usually not
accurate or uniform.
For masonry walls, we dimension from edge to edge for the wall as well as for
the openings like Doors and windows.
Best Practice 17
As per NCS, there should be a minimum of 1/16” (1.6 mm) gap between
drawing and extension line, minimum 9/16” (14.5 mm) inch length of first
extension line and minimum 3/8” (10 mm) for baseline spacing.
The baseline spacing for all parallel dimensions should remain consistent
with a minimum gap of 3/8” (10 mm).
Best Practice 19
Try to keep drawing clean with organized dimensions, try not to clutter your
drawings with randomly placed dimensions and keep them grouped for
clarity.
Best Practice 20
Slopes are added with slope notation as shown in the image below.
Here for every 10-unit horizontal distance, the slope rises 4 units in height.
Summary
So, how many of these best practices were new to you?
If you have a best practice that you think should be included in this list then
share it in the comments down below.
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jaiprakash Pandey
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