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Chapter 21 Specifying 3D Coordinates 669

Summary

This chapter introduced you to 3D drawing. You read about:

Understanding all of the types of 3D coordinates and how to use them

Using editing commands in 3D

Using point filters, object snaps, and grips in 3D drawings

Utilizing elevation and thickness

Understanding the HIDE command and the system variables that affect the hidden display

Working with User Coordinate Systems in 3D

In the next chapter, I explain all of the ways to view 3D drawings.

 

 

 

Viewing 3D Drawings 22C H A P T E R

As soon as you start to work in three dimensions, you need to be able to see the drawing from different angles. By combining vari-

ous User Coordinate Systems (UCSs) and different viewpoints, you can view and draw any object in 3D.

Your basic point of reference is plan view in the World Coordinate System (WCS). This is the view that you use in 2D, and so it’s familiar. Plan view is the view from the top. For a building, the top is obvious. However, for a bushing, which view is the top? Figure 22-1 shows a 2D drawing of a bushing. Figure 22-2 shows the 3D version. The left view of Figure 22-1 is the plan view looking down from the top. (Although your drawing calls this the plan view, engineering practice might call this the front view.)

In This Chapter

Using the

standard viewpoints

Using the DDVPOINT and VPOINT commands

Displaying a plan view with the PLAN command

Shading your drawing

Using 3D orbit

Creating a perspective view

Laying out

a 3D drawing

672 Part IV Drawing in Three Dimensions

Figure 22-1: The left image is the plan view, looking down from the top.

Thanks to Robert Mack, the Dexter Company, Fairfield, Iowa, for this drawing.

Figure 22-2: A 3D view of the bushing after using the HIDE command.

When working in 3D, you can use many of the familiar 2D techniques for viewing your drawing:

Use ZOOM Previous to display the previous viewpoint.

Save views so that you can easily return to them.

Use real-time zoom and pan as well as all of the other zoom options.

Create tiled viewports to display more than one view at a time.

Cross-

You can save drawings in the new 3D DWF format for viewing on the Web or sending to people.

Reference

For more information, see Chapter 28.

 

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