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Types of Lines in Engineering Drawing

The document discusses the different types of lines used in engineering drawings including visible lines, hidden lines, section lines, center lines, dimension lines, extension lines, leader lines, cutting plane lines, break lines, phantom lines, and border lines. It provides details on each line type and their uses in technical drawings.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
850 views

Types of Lines in Engineering Drawing

The document discusses the different types of lines used in engineering drawings including visible lines, hidden lines, section lines, center lines, dimension lines, extension lines, leader lines, cutting plane lines, break lines, phantom lines, and border lines. It provides details on each line type and their uses in technical drawings.

Uploaded by

merouaneinconu
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Types of Lines in Engineering Drawing

Written by Anup Kumar Dey in Civil ,Construction ,Mechanical ,Piping Design


Basics
Lines play an important role in the engineering industry. Explaining a complex
drawing in words is impossible and hence, engineering drawing has become the
worldwide language of engineers, designers, technicians, and craftsmen. The shape,
scale, and interrelation of a complex thing can easily be transmitted using
engineering drawings. Every engineering drawing has various types of lines in it and
so, lines are a major part of the graphic language.

Lines used in any engineering drawing may be straight or curved. Lines are defined
as elements with no breadth but unlimited length (magnitude). Lines locate two points
that are not in the same location but fall along the line. A straight line denotes the
shortest distance between two points.

Lines can be drawn in any direction. Straight and curved lines are parallel when the
shortest distance between them remains constant.

Again, lines are differentiated as thick lines (0.6 mm thickness), thin lines (0.3 mm
thick), Continuous lines, dashed lines, freehand lines, zigzag lines, chain lines, etc. In
this article, we will learn the various types of lines that are widely used in engineering
drawings.

Types of Lines for Technical Drawings


There are 12 types of lines usually used in engineering drawing. they are:

 Visible lines
 Hidden lines
 Section lines
 Center lines
 Dimension lines
 Extension lines
 Leader lines
 Cutting plane lines
 Break lines
 Phantom lines
 Borderlines
 Arrowheads
Visible Lines
They are dark and thick lines of any engineering design drawing. Also known as
object lines, visible lines define the features that will be clearly visible in a particular
view. They define the outline or contour of the object. All thick lines are usually drawn
0.6 mm thick.

Hidden Lines
Hidden lines are light, dashed, narrow, and short. They provide features that can not
be seen in a particular view but are provided to clarify some specific features. To
start and end hidden lines, a dash is always used except when a hidden line starts or
ends at a parallel visible or hidden line. Dashes should meet in the corners. All thin
lines are of 0.3 mm thickness. Sometimes hidden lines can be omitted.

Section Lines
Section lines are thin lines drawn at a 45-degree angle. They are also called hatch
lines. In any sectional view, section lines indicate the material that has been cut
through.

Center Lines
Center lines in an engineering drawing show the center of a round or cylindrical
shape. The line is drawn using a thin line with alternating long and short dashes.
Long dashes are used to begin and terminate center lines.

At the center point, the center lines must intersect by crossing either the long or short
dashes. They should continue a short distance beyond the object or feature. To
represent that two or more features are in the same plane, center lines can be joined
within a single view. The center lines are not meant to cross the space between
views.

Dimension Lines
As the name suggests, dimension lines represent the dimensions or sizes of
components in an engineering drawing. They are represented by thin lines with
arrowheads at the ends that are broken along their length to make room for the
dimension number. The dimension (length) is mentioned clearly.

Extension Lines
Extension lines which are added using thin lines determine the extent of a dimension.
Sometimes, extension lines are used to demonstrate the extension of a surface to a
theoretical intersection.
Leader Lines
Leader lines are used to mention a specific note to a feature on a drawing, as well as
to direct dimensions, symbols, item numbers, and part numbers. they are added
using thin lines.
The main features of leader lines are:

 Usually drawn at 30, 45, and 60 degrees.


 It has a short shoulder at one end that begins at the center of the vertical height of
the text and a standard dimension arrowhead at the other end that touches the
feature.
 Leader lines should not cross one another and should not be overly long.
 Leader lines are not drawn in vertical or horizontal orientation.
 Dimension lines, section lines, and extension lines should not be parallel to leader
lines.

Cutting Plane Lines


Cutting plane lines are thick broken intermittent lines with small 90-degree
arrowheads. These type of lines indicates when a section is mentally cut in half to
better perceive the internal detail.

Break Lines
Break Lines in engineering drawings are very important and are used to separate
sections for clarity or to shorten a section. There are three types of break lines, each
with a distinct line weight:

 Short Break Lines: Short break lines are denoted by a thick wavy line and are
used to break the edge or surface of a part to reveal a concealed surface.
 Long Break Lines: Long, thin lines are used as long break lines to indicate that
the center section of an object has been removed so that it can be drawn on a
smaller piece of paper.
 Cylindrical Break Lines: To depict spherical parts that have been broken in half
to better clarify the print or to shorten the object’s length, thin lines are used as
cylindrical break lines.

Phantom Lines
Phantom Lines are thin lines composed of long dashes alternated with pairs of small
dashes. This type of line in engineering drawings serves the following purposes:

 They depict the alternate location of moving parts.


 They demonstrate the relationship between elements that fit together.
 They demonstrate repetitive detail.

Border Lines
Thick and continuous lines that show the drawing’s boundaries or divide different
objects drawn on the same sheet are known as border lines. They are also used to
distinguish the title block from the body of the illustration.

Arrowheads
Arrowheads are used to end dimension lines, leader lines, cutting-plane lines, and
viewing plane lines. They are drawn three times the length of the width. Arrowheads
can be filled or not filled.

Line Precedence
When two or more lines appear in the same position, the lines that are the least
relevant are removed. Lines in engineering drawings are drawn in the following order
of precedence/importance:

 Cutting plane line


 Visible line
 Hidden line
 Centerline
All the above lines are usually predefined in most CAD Software packages as layers.
Depending on the layer chosen, the line will be inserted in the drawing and will be
visible in a certain way. However, most drafting companies make their own custom
layers with different colors to distinguish them from one another.

Types of Lines as per ISO 128-2


The international standard ISO 128 Part 2 provides the basic conventions for lines
used in engineering technical drawings. The standard establishes the line types
extensively used in engineering drawings for producing diagrams, plans, or maps.
ISO 128-2 also provides the designations and configurations of all types of lines, as
well as general rules for line draughting.

Referring to ISO 128-2, there are 15 basic line types and three line subtypes as
represented in the following image (Fig. 2):

Fig. 2: Basic Engineering Line Types and Sub-types per ISO 128-2

Technical Line Dimensions:


The width of engineering drawing lines can be one of the following depending on the
type and size of the technical drawing.

 0.13 mm;
 0.18 mm;
 0.25 mm;
 0.35 mm;
 0.5 mm;
 0.7 mm;
 1.0 mm;
 1.4 mm;
 2.0 mm.
Note that the line width of any one line must be constant throughout the complete
line. If you are a designer and wish to master all the types of lines used in
engineering drawing, ISO 128-Part 2 is a must-read for you.

In recent times, due to technological advancement, most of the engineering drawings


are produced by CAD software packages. Most of the above-mentioned line types
are predefined in CAD Software packages as layers so you don’t have to worry about
the uniformity of the line widths. Based on the line requirement of the engineering
drawing you can easily choose the necessary layer to display the line in a certain
way. Customization of line types is also possible in these CAD software programs.

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