Explore the complexities of scaling and scale factors in detail drawings with this informative discussion. Understand the concept of scale, its representation, and its central role in achieving the desired level of detail in architectural drawings.
Key Insights
- The article explains the concept of scaling in architectural drawings, using the example of a 22 by 34 title block scaled to a quarter inch equals a foot, and a scale factor of 48. The scale factor denotes the ratio of the representation to the actual size, whereby a quarter inch represents 12 inches, and one inch equals 48 inches.
- Scale factors can be varied to achieve different levels of detail. For instance, a half inch equals a foot, represents a scale factor of 24, and provides more detail in the drawing compared to a quarter inch equals a foot. Similarly, increasing the scale to an inch equals a foot, i.e., a scale factor of 12, allows the drawing to show even more detail.
- Details in architectural drawings are typically represented in square boxes, and the scale factor can be adjusted to zoom in or out for higher or lower levels of detail. The article illustrates this with a six by six detail border at a scale factor of 12 in a square format, and further scale adjustments to show increasingly detailed areas.
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We're getting ready to start actually working on our detail drawings, but I need to review with you the concept of scaling and scale. So you can see that there's a large rectangle that's in a transparent yellow.
That's the 22 × 34 title block at a scale factor of a quarter inch equals a foot. So then if we look at the scale factor itself, it's a scale factor of 48, where a quarter of an inch equals a foot, a quarter represents 12 inches, one inch represents 48 inches. What I've now done is I've put a vertical slice that's one quarter of the width of a 22 × 34.
And so you can see that this quarter inch equals a foot vertical slice would cover this much of the house. So again, there it is at a quarter inch equals a foot. If I zoom in, what I'm now showing is that same vertical slice, this same slice at a half inch equals a foot.
So a half inch equals a foot, a half inch is to 12, one is to 24. If I were to print this area at a half inch equals a foot, I would end up being able to show more detail in a drawing than this same image at a quarter inch equals a foot. If I were to zoom in even more, you can see that I'm showing this area at an inch equals a foot, which is a scale factor of 12.
When I were to print them, I'm even showing more detail in the one inch equals a foot image. So I have an inch equals a foot, scale factor of 12, half an inch equals a foot, scale factor of 24, a scale factor of 1 over 48 for a quarter inch equals a foot. Now, it's very typical that we use this shape for forms such as wall sections, but details are normally drawn in square boxes.
Again, we have vertical and horizontal alignments, but most typically details are drawn in square boxes. So what I'm now showing you is a six by six detail border that's at a scale factor of one inch equals a foot or a factor of 12 in a square format. So you can again see this is now going to print as a six by six inch square compared to this vertical slice.
So this slice here and this square here are at the same scale. You can see that we're getting smaller and smaller and smaller as we go along. So this is going to have a more detailed level of information contained within it.
So again, this is at a scale factor of 12. What we're going to do in a second is to start zooming into this area. But again, this one is at a scale factor of 12, and we will be going into even more detailed areas as we proceed.
We had this view over here, which was a scale factor of 12, one inch equals a foot. And if you look in through here, you can start to see that we zoom in and zoom in and zoom in increasingly tightly on detailed things. So right now I'm showing the next most commonly used scale factor, an inch and a half equals a foot, inch and a half equals 12.
It's a scale factor of eight. We zoom in more and now we're three inches equal a foot or a scale factor of four. So again, you can see how things are getting smaller and smaller.
We can again show increasing amounts of detail. As we continue to zoom, the next scale we have is six inches equals a foot. This is also a half size drawing.
We have a scale factor of two. And last but not least, we have one to one, so that you can see that I would literally be drawing my detail at one to one. If need be, we could also do a two to one, which would be twice the normal size, but we normally don't see that happening within the construction community.
So again, our details go from smaller to larger to larger yet. So again, one to one, a scale factor of 12. And then we have the wall sections starting at one to 12, going up to half inch, all the way up here at a quarter inch, and then we have the sheet.
So what we're going to be focusing on are primarily details within this scale factor range. When we end up working on our interior elevations, we will have some that are in this scale factor range, and then we will also have other interior elevations that might be at a larger scale, but either a two horizontal, a two vertical, or a two by two. I hope that this has helped to clarify where we're going to be in this class.
Again, our goal is to work on details that show how to assemble smaller components within a building project.