Engineering Drawing
17 Mechanical Drawing - Sections
Sections
Many components cannot be fully described by drawing their outside views, whether as isometric
or orthographic views. This is because there are frequently internal features too, holes, voids, and
suchlike. It is theoretically possible to show all these features as hidden detail superimposed on the
outside view, but for objects of any internal complexity this is visually confusing. In such case, one
or more views are constructed, not as outside views, but as section views.
A section view is the visual equivalent of cutting an item partially open so as to reveal the interior
detail. The cutting plane used for this is often simply planar, but it can be staggered, or as complex
as is appropriate to reveal effectively the necessary interior detail.
An example of a section view in an orthographic layout is shown in fig 11.
Compare this with the earlier orthographic layout of the same part shown in figure 1; note how the
sectioned view clarifies the detail of the internal features.
Sectional views can be made of individual components or of assemblies. Indeed, they are especially
useful for assemblies so as to show how one piece fits inside another. A sectional drawing of, for
example, a car gearbox, showing the gears, shafts, etc inside their housing, illustrates this point.
The regular-spaced sloping lines are termed hatching. Hatching is added to any face that lies
exactly on the cut plane of the sectional view, so as to distinguish these faces from all the others –
which must lie ‘behind’ the cut plane. There are just a few exceptions to this, when hatching, by
convention, isn’t put onto cut faces – details are given below.
Care
: hatch lines take a long time to draw neatly, and are difficult to rub out. So - leave all
hatching to the very last, when all associated details have first been checked carefully.
A section view is always associated with a corresponding outside orthographic view, as can be seen
in fig 11. The location of the cutting plane is shown on this outside view. The direction of the
arrowheads indicates the direction of viewing from the cutting plane. The portion of the outside
view that lies away from the viewing direction is ‘discarded’ then an orthographic view of the cut
portion is projected in the normal manner, to yield the section view. The section view is located
according to the projection, first or third angle, in the same way as the rest of the views on the
drawing.
The manner of identifying the cutting plane is as shown in figure 11.