Introduction
Engineering drawings come in several types, each serving a specific purpose in the design and manufacturing process. Understanding which type of drawing you are looking at — and what it should contain — is fundamental to working in a mechanical design environment.
Assembly Drawing
Shows how multiple parts fit together. Defines the overall arrangement, key assembly dimensions, and often includes a parts list (bill of materials). Assembly drawings do NOT dimension individual part features — those belong on detail drawings.
Key elements: overall dimensions, reference numbers linking to the parts list, exploded views or section views to show internal arrangement.
Detail Drawing (Part Drawing)
Defines a single part completely — geometry, dimensions, tolerances, material, surface finish, and any special notes. This is the drawing that goes to the machine shop. Every dimension needed to manufacture and inspect the part must appear on the detail drawing.
Section View
A cross-sectional view created by cutting through the part with an imaginary cutting plane. Reveals internal features (bores, cavities, channels) that cannot be shown clearly in standard views. The cutting plane is indicated with a chain line and letter labels (e.g., A-A).
Exploded View
Shows an assembly with parts separated along assembly axes to illustrate how they fit together. Commonly used in maintenance manuals and assembly instructions. Not a manufacturing drawing — it does not carry dimensions or tolerances.
Wiring / Schematic Drawings
For electromechanical systems, separate electrical schematic and wiring drawings define the electrical portion of the design. Mechanical designers need to understand these to coordinate mounting, connector locations, and cable routing.
Drawing Hierarchy in Practice
| Drawing Type | Purpose | Contains Dimensions? |
|---|---|---|
| Assembly drawing | Show how parts fit together | Overall/reference dims only |
| Detail drawing | Define individual part | Yes — all manufacturing dims |
| Section view | Show internal features | As needed |
| Exploded view | Illustrate assembly sequence | No |
FAQ
Q. Can one drawing sheet contain both assembly and detail information?
A. In practice, small assemblies sometimes combine both on one sheet. For any part that will be separately manufactured or purchased, a standalone detail drawing is the standard. Combining creates confusion about revision control.
Q. What should a parts list (BOM) on an assembly drawing include?
A. Part number, description, quantity, material (for custom parts), and catalog/supplier reference (for purchased parts). Revision level is important for configuration management.
Q. What is a general arrangement (GA) drawing?
A. A high-level drawing showing the overall layout of a machine or installation — footprint, heights, connection points. Used for planning, facility layout, and customer reference. Not a manufacturing document.



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