Technical Drawing: What Is It?
A technical drawing shows a physical object or system. It provides standardized information about the object. The information includes dimensions, shapes, materials, function, and assembly instructions.
Product designers, manufacturing specialists, and engineers use technical drawings. Technical drawings act as a universal visual guide. Everyone in a project can understand them, regardless of language!

Technical Drawing Types
There are different types of objects that technical drawings can represent, with varying design intent and functionality. Therefore, there are also different types of technical drawings. Each type of technical drawing serves a different purpose. For example, technical drawings specifically to make parts, or to assemble groups of parts, or to guide the production of an entire system.
The technical drawing types can include, for example:
- Part drawings:
To show detailed information of a single part.
This includes dimensions, tolerances, surface quality, heat treatment, coatings, and material. - Welding drawings:
To show the exact position of parts and welding information.
This includes standards, quality level, inspection class, weld type, and coating. - Assembly drawings:
To show how parts fit together.
This can include:- General dimensions, orientation and placement of all parts, part numbers linked to the Bill of Materials (BOM), and even show joining methods or fasteners.
- Exploded views, cutout views, or detail views for clarity (some cases)
- Production drawings:
To show how to manufacture a product.
This can include:- Geometric details such as dimensions and tolerances.
- Material details such as material type, surface finish, hardness, coating, plating information.
- More relevant manufacturing notes, such as views, part numbers, fasteners, assembly instructions, etc.
- Installation drawings:
To show how to place the finished product on site.
This can include:- Foundation size, height, and anchoring points.
- Bolting locations and connections to utilities, such as electricity or piping.
how to read A technical drawing?
To read a technical drawing, it is necessary to understand the:
- Key elements of a technical drawing
- Views and projections
- Scale and proportion
Elements of a technical drawing
A technical drawing is made up of multiple key elements. These elements include:
- Lines
- Visible Lines:
Visible lines show edges and boundaries that are directly seen in a view. - Hidden Lines:
Hidden lines show edges and features that are not visible in the current view. - Center Lines:
Center lines show the axis of symmetry or rotation of a feature. - Dimension Lines:
Dimension lines show the direction and extent of a measurement. - Extension Lines:
Extension lines show where a dimension starts and ends on a feature. - Leader Lines:
Leader lines connect a note or symbol to a specific feature. - Section Lines:
Section lines show surfaces exposed by a cut in a sectional view. - Cutting Plane Lines:
Cutting plane lines show where the object is cut to create a sectional view. - Break Lines:
Break lines show that a portion of the part is not displayed.
- Visible Lines:
- Symbols
- Dimension Symbols:
Dimension symbols indicate diameter, radius, depth, angle, or other measurement types. - Geometric Tolerance Symbols:
Geometric tolerance symbols define permitted variation in form, orientation, and position of features. - Surface Finish Symbols:
Surface finish symbols specify required surface texture and roughness. - Welding Symbols:
Welding symbols define weld type, size, length, and location. - Datum Symbols:
Datum symbols identify reference features used for measurement and inspection.
The datum symbol is a capital letter inside a rectangular frame, attached to the feature it references.
It looks like this: 🄰 (for feature A). - Section Symbols:
Section symbols indicate the direction and position of a sectional view. - Revision Symbols:
Revision symbols identify changes made to the drawing. - Thread Symbols:
Thread symbols specify thread type, size, and pitch.
- Dimension Symbols:
- Dimensions
- Dimensions define the exact size, shape, and location of each feature on a part.
- There are linear dimensions, diameters, radii, and angles.
- Tolerances
- Tolerances define the permitted variation to ensure proper fit and function.
- Tolerances exist because, in real-life, manufacturing processes are never perfect, there are always some small deviations in the dimensions of parts.
- To make sure that manufactured parts fit precisely and accurately, there are tighter tolerances for certain parts. For example, engine components.
- Material Specifications
Material specifications define the required material type, grade, and mechanical properties.
They state surface finish and required surface treatments, such as:- Heat treatment: processes like hardening, tempering, annealing, or stress relieving to change material strength or hardness.
- Surface coating: painting, powder coating, anodizing, or plating to protect against corrosion or wear.
- Plating: applying a layer of metal, such as zinc, nickel, or chrome, to improve corrosion resistance or appearance.
- Case hardening: hardening the surface layer of a part while keeping the core softer for toughness.





- Part Identification
- Part identification assigns a unique number and name to each component.
- It links each component to the Bill of Materials (BOM).
- Fasteners and Joining Methods
- Fasteners and joining methods define how parts connect and remain fixed during operation.
- They specify type, size, and installation requirements of parts.
- Assembly Instructions
- Assembly instructions describe how parts fit together to form the complete product.
- They define orientation, sequence, and alignment requirements of parts.
- Manufacturing Notes
- Manufacturing notes define required production processes and technical constraints.
- They specify machining, forming, welding, or heat treatment requirements.
- Title Block and Reference Information
- The title block identifies the drawing and controls document traceability.
- It includes the drawing number, revision, scale, date, and responsible engineer(s).
Views & Projections
In a technical drawing, projection is the method used to show a three-dimensional object on a two-dimensional plane.
Projection represents the shape, size, and features of the object from specific directions and views. These views are front, top, or side, for example.

Scale & Proportions
Technical drawings use scale and proportions to show objects larger or smaller than actual size.
The scale is the ratio between drawing dimensions and real dimensions.
Using scale allows both large and small objects to fit on standard paper size.
For example, a 1:100 scale means 1 unit on the drawing equals 100 units in reality.
A 2:1 scale means the drawing is twice as large as the object.
GD&T: geometric dimensioning and tolerancing
How Parts Really Fit Together
When engineers design a part, they don’t just care about its size. They also care about how the part behaves in the real world. This including how the part sits, fits, and connects with other parts.
Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerancing (GD&T) is a system that communicates all of this clearly on a technical drawing. Instead of only saying “how big something should be,” GD&T explains how much variation is allowed in shape, orientation, and position.
- A dimension says how big something should be (e.g., 10 mm).
- A tolerance says how much error is allowed (e.g., 10 ± 0.1 mm).
- GD&T says what shape, orientation, and location errors are allowed.
- GD&T is powerful because it describes size and also function, how parts fit and move!
In simple terms, GD&T is a language that tells manufacturers not just what to make, but how accurately it needs to behave in an assembly
Start with a simple problem: the wobbly table
Imagine a table with four legs.
Even if every leg is exactly 700 mm long, the table can still wobble if:
- The feet are not flat.
- The legs are not perpendicular to the tabletop.
- The legs are not in the correct positions.
Traditional dimensions handle the length. GD&T handles the geometry: flatness, perpendicularity, and position.
In summary, GD&T is about answering 3 important questions:
| Question | What GD&T controls |
|---|---|
| 1. Is it in the right place? | Position/Location controls (position, concentricity/runout. Position is by far the most important for beginners!) |
| 2. Is it the right shape? | Form controls (flatness, straightness, circularity, cylindricity) |
| 3. Is it pointing the right direction? | Orientation controls (parallelism, perpendicularity, angularity) |
Datums: the part’s coordinate system
Suppose you want to describe where a hole is.
“20 mm from the edge” is ambiguous! Unless everyone agrees which edge is the reference.
Datums are the agreed-upon reference surfaces/features, which are used to locate everything else.
To define datums, you can use this 3-2-1 rule:
- Put the part on a primary datum surface A (like a table): removes 3 motions.
- Push it against a secondary datum B (a fence): removes 2 more motions.
- Push it against a tertiary datum C (another fence): removes the 1 last motion.
Now the part is fully referenced, and the hole location is unambiguous.
This way, the measurement has a shared reference frame, so different people and machines measure the same thing the same way.

Position Controls:
The First & most important symbol!
Imagine a plate with a hole that must fit over a pin:
- Ideal hole center -> Exactly where the CAD model says.
- Real hole center -> Manufacturing introduces some error!
- GD&T position tolerance creates a tolerance zone around the ideal center.
For a hole, the zone is usually a cylinder
If the drawing says Position ⌀0.20 | A | B | C, this means:
- The actual axis of the hole must stay inside an imaginary cylinder of 0.20 mm in diameter, located at the ideal position, referenced from datums A, B, and C.
Note: the hole can shift a little in any direction, not just X and Y separately!

Form controls:
flatness, straightness, circularity
Flatness
- Is the surface free of hills and valleys?
- Flatness does not require a datum. It controls the surface by itself.
- Mental picture: Put the surface between two perfectly parallel sheets. The entire surface must fit between them.
Straightness
- Is a line element straight?
- Example: The edge of a rail should not bow.
Circularity (roundness)
- Is each circular cross-section truly round?
- Example: A shaft should not be egg-shaped.

Orientation controls:
parallelism and perpendicularity
Perpendicularity (square-ness)
- Is the feature at 90° to a datum?
- The hole axis must stay inside a cylinder that is exactly perpendicular to datum A.
- Example: A drilled hole must be square to the base plate.
Parallelism
- Is the feature oriented parallel to a datum?
- Example: Two guide rails should run side-by-side without converging.

(Image copyright belongs to its respective owner).
Note!
What is the difference between flatness and perpendicularity?
- Flatness checks whether a surface is internally flat;
- Perpendicularity checks whether a feature is oriented 90° relative to a datum.
size vs. position:
The biggest beginner confusion
Suppose the hole size is ⌀10 ± 0.05 mm. This controls diameter only.
A hole can be perfectly 10.00 mm in diameter and still be unusable because it is drilled in the wrong place. That is why size and position are separate controls.
Note!
A hole measures 10.00 mm exactly, but its center is shifted 0.5 mm from where the pin expects it. Is the hole acceptable if the position tolerance is ⌀0.20 mm?
No. Size is perfect, but position is not!
A complete beginner example
Imagine that the part is a rectangular plate that has one mounting hole.
- The rectangular plate sits on a machine base.
- One side aligns against a stop.
- The hole must accept a pin.
Datums:
- A: bottom surface (sits on the machine).
- B: left edge (side stop).
- C: front edge (front stop).
| Feature | Control |
|---|---|
| Bottom surface | Flatness 0.10 |
| Hole axis | Perpendicularity ⌀0.05 to A |
| Hole location | Position ⌀0.20 to A|B|C |
This means:
- The bottom surface must fit between two planes 0.10 mm apart.
- The hole axis must be nearly square to the base (A), staying within a 0.05 mm diameter cylinder oriented perpendicular to A.
- After locating the part using A, B, and C, the hole axis must lie inside a 0.20 mm diameter cylinder at the ideal location.
That one position callout usually replaces a pile of ± dimensions and better reflects assembly performance!
How to read a feature control Frame
A typical box might look conceptually like ”Position ⌀0.20 to A|B|C”
- Position = Geometric characteristic.
- ⌀0.20 = Diameter of the tolerance zone.
- A | B | C = Datums used to establish the reference frame.
Read it as a sentence:
“The hole axis must stay inside a 0.20 mm diameter cylindrical zone located from datums A, B, and C.”
See the image that follows, from InspectionXpert.com:

- Leader Arrow: Indicates which feature is controlled by the GD&T callout. If it points to a diameter, the axis is controlled; if it points to a surface, that surface is controlled. It may be omitted in some drawings.
- Geometric Characteristic Symbol: Defines the type of geometric control being applied (e.g., flatness, position, perpendicularity).
- Diameter / Cylindrical Tolerance Zone: A diameter symbol is used when the tolerance zone is cylindrical, indicating radial control around an axis.
- Tolerance Value: Specifies the allowable deviation. The unit is consistent across the drawing and defined in the title block.
- Material or Feature Modifiers: Modifiers such as Maximum Material Condition (MMC) or projected tolerance zones refine how tolerance is applied.
- Primary Datum: The main reference feature, identified by a letter, used as the first constraint during measurement. It typically restricts multiple degrees of freedom.
- Secondary Datum: The second reference, used after the primary datum to further constrain the part during inspection.
- Tertiary Datum: The third reference, applied last to fully stabilize and define the part’s orientation for measurement.
Common GD&T Symbols
According to InspectionXpert.com, these are the most common GD&T symbols:
| Symbol | Geometric Characteristic | Feature Modifier | Datums | Datum Modifier | Bonus Tolerance | ||
| Form | ![]() | Straightness | ✓ | Datums Not AllowedForm tolerances are defined to limit the deviations of a geometric feature from its ideal form. | NA | ✓ Only at MMC or LMC | |
![]() | Flatness | X | NA | X | |||
![]() | Circularity | X | NA | X | |||
![]() | Cylindricity | X | NA | X | |||
| Profile | ![]() | Profile of a line | X | Datums sometimes required | ✓ | X | |
| Profile of a Surface | X | ✓ | X | |||
| Orientation | | Angularity | ✓ | Datums Required | ✓ | ✓ Only at MMC or LMC | |
| Perpendicularity | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ Only at MMC or LMC | |||
| Parallelism | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ Only at MMC or LMC | |||
| Runout | ![]() | Circular Runout | X | X | X | ||
![]() | Total Runout | X | X | X | |||
| Location | ![]() | Position | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ Only at MMC or LMC | ||
![]() | Concentricity | X | X | X | |||
![]() | Symmetry | X | X | X | |||
Material Conditions in GD&T:
MMC & LMC
MMC and LMC describe how much material a feature contains while still being within its allowed size tolerance:
- MMC (Maximum Material Condition) = The most material possible.
- LMC (Least Material Condition) = The least material possible.
Why MMC Matters? Imagine a bolt passing through a hole. A small hole gives the bolt less room to fit, making assembly more difficult.
This is why MMC is often considered the worst-case assembly condition.
Because the fit is tighter at MMC, the feature usually needs to be positioned more accurately.
Holes vs. Shafts
- For a hole, a smaller diameter removes less material from the part, leaving more material behind:
- MMC = smallest hole
- LMC = largest hole
- For a shaft or pin, a larger diameter contains more material:
- MMC = largest shaft
- LMC = smallest shaft
| Feature | MMC | LMC |
|---|---|---|
| Hole | Smallest size | Largest size |
| Shaft/Pin | Largest size | Smallest size |
MMC is where the most material exists, and LMC is where the least material exists!
Bonus Tolerance = Extra Clearance
As a hole becomes larger than its MMC size, it provides more clearance for the bolt.
This extra clearance allows more variation in the feature’s position while still ensuring the assembly functions correctly.
FYI…ASME rules For GD&T!
According to ASME Y14.5, the fundamental rules of GD&T are as follows:
- ”All dimensions must have a tolerance. Plus and minus tolerances may be applied directly to dimensions or applied from a general tolerance block or general note. For basic dimensions, geometric tolerances are indirectly applied in a related feature control frame. The only exceptions are for dimensions marked as minimum, maximum, stock or reference.
- Dimensions and tolerancing shall fully define each feature. Measurement directly from the drawing or assuming dimensions is not allowed except for special undimensioned drawings.
- A drawing should have the minimum number of dimensions required to fully define the end product. The use of reference dimensions should be minimized.
- Dimensions should be applied to features and arranged to represent the function and mating relationship of the part. There should only be one way to interpret dimensions.
- Part geometry should be defined without explicitly specifying manufacturing methods.
- If dimensions are required during manufacturing but not the final geometry (due to shrinkage or other causes) they should be marked as non-mandatory.
- Dimensions should be arranged for maximum readability and should be applied to visible lines in true profiles.
- When geometry is normally controlled by gauge sizes or by code (e.g. stock materials), the dimension(s) shall be included with the gauge or code number in parentheses following the dimension.
- Angles of 90° are assumed when lines (including center lines) are shown at right angles, but no angle is specified.
- Basic 90° angles are assumed where center lines of features in a pattern or surfaces shown at right angles on a 2D orthographic drawing are located or defined by basic dimensions and no angle is specified.
- A basic dimension of zero is assumed where axes, center planes, or surfaces are shown coincident on a drawing, and the relationship between features is defined by geometric tolerances.
- Dimensions and tolerances are valid at 20 °C (68 °F) and 101.3 kPa (14.69 psi) unless stated otherwise.
- Unless explicitly stated, dimensions and tolerances only apply in a free-state condition.
- Unless explicitly stated, tolerances apply to the full length, width, and depth of a feature.
- Dimensions and tolerances only apply at the level of the drawing where specified. It is not mandatory that they apply at other levels (such as an assembly drawing).
- Coordinate systems shown on drawings should be right-handed. Each axis should be labeled and the positive direction should be shown. ”
SPC: Statistical Process Control
For Dimensional Control
Statistical Process Control (SPC) is a method to monitor a production process using data over time, instead of checking products randomly.
For dimensional control, SPC means:
- Measuring physical sizes (length, diameter, thickness, etc.)
- Tracking measurements statistically
- Making sure measurements stay within allowed limits (tolerances)
SPC integrates well with GD&T. It ensures toleranced features stay in control during production.
In addition, SPC helps detect problems early, before too many bad parts are produced.
For example, in a factory:
- Parts are produced continuously (e.g., metal shafts, machined holes)
- Each part has a required dimension (e.g., 20.00 mm ± 0.05 mm)
- SPC plots these measurements on a control chart
If the measurements:
- stay within expected variation → process is stable
- show trends or spikes → something is going wrong (tool wear, machine drift, operator issue)
So SPC is essentially an early warning system for manufacturing quality.
Engineers plot dimensional data from tools against upper and lower limits.
The tools to plot dimensional data can be calipers or CMMs.
CMMs are Coordinate Measuring Machines. They are precision devices used in manufacturing. Engineers use them to measure part geometry in 3D space. A probe touches the part surface at multiple points. The machine records X, Y, and Z coordinates for each point!
SPC control charts, and how to read them
Visually, you’re plotting measurements over time to see if the process is stable or drifting.
A control chart usually has:
- Data points → each measured part over time
- Center line (CL) → the average “normal” value of the process
- Upper Control Limit (UCL) → highest acceptable natural variation
- Lower Control Limit (LCL) → lowest acceptable natural variation

Interpretation of chart:
1. Stable process (good)
- Points bounce randomly around the center line
- All points stay inside UCL and LCL
✅ Only normal variation, process is under control
2. Problem starting (warning)
- Points start drifting upward or downward
- Pattern appears (trend, cycle, clustering)
⚠️ Something is changing (tool wear, temperature, misalignment)
3. Out of control (bad)
- A point goes outside UCL/LCL !
⛔Abnormal event, immediate investigation necessary
key distinction in SPC:
Control limits vs. tolerances
SPC dimensional control limits and tolerances are often confused, but they are different!
- Tolerances = Design requirement / engineering specification. This is what you must achieve.
For example:
A shaft diameter must be 20.00 mm ± 0.05 mm.
So acceptable range is: 19.95 mm to 20.05 mm. - SPC control limits = Process behavior. This is what your machine naturally does.
Control limits define UCL / LCL = expected spread of a stable process, and they come from real production data, not design.
These control limits are calculated from actual measurements:- Mean (average)
- Natural variation (standard deviation)
Process capability (Cp, Cpk)
= Tolerances & SPC & dimensional control
Once you verify SPC (stability) and tolerances (requirements), the next question is:
“Even if my process is stable, is it good enough to consistently make parts within tolerance?”
That is exactly what process capability answers.
1) Cp = “potential capability” (best-case performance)
- USL = upper specification limit (tolerance max)
- LSL = lower specification limit (tolerance min)
- σ = natural variation of your process
Cp tells you:
“If the process is perfectly centered, how much room do I have compared to its spread?”
2) Cpk = “real capability” (Actual Performance)
Now we include centering (μ = mean).
Cpk tells you:
“Is the process not only precise, but also correctly centered within tolerance?”
Industry Standard Values for Cp & Cpk:
| Value of Cp or Cpk | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| < 1.0 | Not capable (bad) |
| 1.0–1.33 | Barely acceptable |
| 1.33–1.67 | Good / capable |
| > 1.67 | Excellent / high-quality process! |
example: real dimensional control of Cp & Cpk
Let’s use a simple machining example so you see exactly how SPC connects to capability.
The specification (tolerance)
A shaft must be:
- Target: 20.00 mm
- Tolerance: ±0.05 mm
So:
- LSL = 19.95 mm
- USL = 20.05 mm
The process data (what the machine is actually doing)
After measuring many parts:
- Average (μ) = 20.02 mm
- Standard deviation (σ) = 0.01 mm
Interpretation already:
- The process is slightly shifted upward (not centered perfectly)
- Variation is fairly tight
Calculate Cp (process spread vs tolerance width)
Substitute values:
- USL − LSL = 20.05 − 19.95 = 0.10
- 6σ = 6 × 0.01 = 0.06
So:
- Cp = 1.67 → process variation is very good
- The process is capable in principle
Calculate Cpk (accounting for mis-centering)
Now compute both sides:
Upper side:
- USL − μ = 20.05 − 20.02 = 0.03
- 3σ = 0.03
→ 0.03 / 0.03 = 1.0
Lower side:
- μ − LSL = 20.02 − 19.95 = 0.07
- 3σ = 0.03
→ 0.07 / 0.03 = 2.33
Take the minimum:
We now compare:
| Metric | Value | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Cp | 1.67 | Process is capable in theory |
| Cpk | 1.0 | Process is barely capable in reality! |
Even though the process is precise:
- It is shifted upward
- It is closer to the USL (danger side)
- Some parts may start failing on the upper tolerance limit
Conlusion – What is the problem?
- You do NOT have a variation problem
- You have a centering (calibration/tool offset) problem
Solution:
- Adjust machine offset downward slightly
- Re-center process back to 20.00 mm
Manufacturing processes / methods
& Technical Drawing Differences
Manufacturing processes are controlled methods used to transform raw materials into finished components by altering shape, structure, or properties through mechanical, thermal, chemical, or energy-based means. These processes are selected based on geometry requirements, material behavior, production scale, and functional performance constraints.
Machining (CNC Milling / Turning)
Machining is a subtractive manufacturing process where material is removed from a solid workpiece using cutting tools to achieve the final geometry with high precision. Examples are:
- CNC milling:
Material is removed using rotating cutting tools along multiple axes to create prismatic and complex geometries - CNC turning:
Workpiece rotates while a stationary cutting tool removes material, mainly for cylindrical parts - Drilling:
Creates cylindrical holes using a rotating drill bit - Grinding (precision finishing):
Uses abrasive wheels to achieve very tight tolerances and surface finishes - EDM (Electrical Discharge Machining):
Removes material using electrical discharges, suitable for hard or complex materials

What the drawing looks like?
- Clean orthographic views (front/top/side)
- Dense dimensions everywhere
- Datum symbols (A, B, C)
- GD&T feature control frames
Typical visual signs of machining technical drawing:
- Everything is dimension-driven
- No “manufacturing process hints”
- Very geometric and precise
Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see datums + GD&T everywhere ➡️ machining drawing
Sheet Metal Forming
Sheet metal forming is a manufacturing process where flat metal sheets are plastically deformed into final shapes using bending, stamping, or drawing, without material removal. Examples are:
- Bending:
Plastic deformation of sheet along a straight axis to create angles - Stamping:
Pressing sheet metal into a die to create shapes or cut features - Deep drawing:
Forming sheet into deep hollow shapes using tensile forces - Punching / blanking:
Cutting or removing material using a punch and die system - Rolling (sheet production stage):
Reducing thickness and producing sheet stock through rollers

What the drawing looks like
- Flat, unfolded 2D shape
- Bend lines clearly marked (dashed)
- Bend angles annotated
- Sometimes two views: flat + formed
Typical visual signs of sheet metal forming technical drawing:
- Looks “unfolded” or “spread out”
- Geometry looks unnatural in 2D (because it is flattened)
- Bend table often present
Key recognition rule ➡️ If it looks like a flattened 3D object ➡️ sheet metal drawing
Injection Molding (Plastics)
Injection molding is a manufacturing process where molten plastic is injected into a mold cavity, cooled, and ejected as a solid part with repeatable geometry. Examples are:
- Injection molding: molten polymer is injected into a closed mold cavity under pressure and solidified
- Overmolding: a second material is molded over an existing part for grip or multi-material functionality
- Insert molding: inserts (metal or other components) are placed into the mold and encapsulated by plastic
- Multi-cavity molding: multiple identical parts are produced in a single mold cycle for high-volume production

What the drawing looks like:
- Clean plastic part outline
- Draft angles marked on vertical walls
- Wall thickness controlled
- Parting line sometimes shown
Typical visual signs of injection molding technical drawing:
- Slightly “industrial product design” look
- Less GD&T everywhere
- Focus on mold behavior, not machining precision
Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see draft angles + plastic housing features ➡️ injection molding
Casting (Sand / Die Casting)
Casting is a manufacturing process where molten material is poured into a mold cavity and solidifies into a near-net-shape component. Examples are:
- Sand casting: molten metal is poured into a sand mold that is broken after solidification
- Die casting: molten metal is injected under pressure into a reusable steel mold for high-volume production
- Investment casting (lost wax): a wax pattern is coated with ceramic, melted out, and replaced with metal
- Gravity casting: molten metal fills a mold under gravity without applied pressure

What the drawing looks like:
- Rough shape + final machined surfaces
- Extra allowances marked
- Internal cavities shown via cores
- Less geometric precision on raw surfaces
Typical visual signs of casting technical drawing:
- “Raw + finished hybrid” drawing
- Machining symbols only on key faces
- More complex internal geometry indicators
Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see machining + rough cast geometry combined ➡️ casting drawing
Welding and Fabrication
Welding is a manufacturing and assembly process where parts are permanently joined using heat, pressure, or both, often causing material fusion at the joint. Examples are:
- MIG welding:
Uses a continuously fed wire electrode and shielding gas for fast industrial welding - TIG welding:
Uses a non-consumable tungsten electrode for high precision welds - Spot welding:
Joins sheet metal by applying localized heat and pressure at points - Arc welding:
General category of welding using electric arc heat for fusion - Riveting (often in hybrid fabrication):
Mechanical fastening using deformable rivets instead of fusion - Bolted assembly fabrication:
Structural assembly using threaded fasteners for disassembly capability

What the drawing looks like
- Assembly views of multiple parts
- Weld symbols everywhere (triangles, lines, notes)
- Minimal part geometry detail
- Focus on joints, not surfaces
Typical visual signs of welding technical drawing:
- Symbol-heavy instead of dimension-heavy. Especially with welding symbols!
- Looks like instructions for assembly, not machining
- Often multiple parts in one drawing
Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see weld symbols dominating ➡️ fabrication drawing
Additive Manufacturing (3D Printing)
Additive manufacturing is a process where parts are built layer-by-layer from digital models using materials such as polymers, resins, or metals. Examples are:
- FDM (Fused Deposition Modeling):
Extrudes thermoplastic filament layer by layer to build a part - SLA (Stereolithography):
Uses a laser to cure liquid resin layer by layer with high precision - SLS (Selective Laser Sintering):
Fuses powder material using a laser to form solid structures - SLM / DMLS (metal 3D printing:
Uses a laser to melt metal powder into fully dense metal parts

What the drawing looks like
- Orientation arrows (critical)
- Support structure regions marked
- Less traditional dimension density
- Sometimes shows print setup, not just part
Typical visual signs of welding technical drawing:
- Directionality matters (Z-axis emphasis)
- Geometry looks “manufacturable in layers”
- Supports sometimes explicitly drawn
Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see print direction + supports ➡️additive manufacturing drawing
Surface Treatment
Surface treatment is a manufacturing process category that modifies the surface properties of a component without significantly changing its bulk geometry, in order to improve performance such as wear resistance, corrosion resistance, hardness, or appearance.
- Heat treatment:
Controlled heating and cooling of metals to modify microstructure and mechanical properties (e.g., hardness, toughness) - Anodizing:
Electrochemical process that forms a protective oxide layer on aluminum surfaces for corrosion resistance and aesthetics - Plating (electroplating / galvanizing):
Deposition of a thin metallic layer (e.g., zinc, chrome) onto a substrate for protection or appearance - Painting / coating:
Application of organic or polymer-based layers for corrosion protection and visual finishing - Powder coating:
Electrostatically applied powder cured under heat to form a durable protective surface layer - Shot peening:
Surface bombardment with small spherical media to induce compressive stresses and improve fatigue resistance - Polishing / surface finishing:
Mechanical or chemical smoothing of surfaces to reduce roughness and improve appearance or friction behavior

What the drawing looks like
- Minimal geometric change to part shape
- Surface finish symbols (roughness Ra values)
- Coating thickness specifications
- Treatment notes applied globally or to selected surfaces
- Sometimes heat treatment tables or process callouts
Typical visual signs of surface treatment technical drawing:
- Geometry is unchanged compared to machining or forming drawings
- Focus shifts to surface notes rather than shape definition
- Often includes annotations like:
- “Anodized 20 µm”
- “Case hardened 58 HRC”
- “Ra 1.6 μm”
Key recognition rule ➡️ If you see surface notes dominating instead of geometry ➡️ surface treatment drawing
Design Validation and Simulation
Before manufacturing, there is a list of checks to do on a part.
The goal of this checklist is to make sure that that a part is strong enough, manufacturable, fits with other parts, works in real environments, and looks acceptable.
In simple terms, engineers ask five questions before manufacturing:
- Will it break? (Structural performance)
- Can it be made? (Manufacturability)
- Will it fit together? (Assembly)
- Will it survive real conditions? (Thermal/environment)
- Will it look good? (Cosmetics)
The design of a part must be correct in CAD, and also, must work in real production and real life!
Structural Performance Analysis
This is to check if a part can withstand forces (push, pull, bending, twisting) without breaking or deforming too much.
It is necessary to prevent part failure during use (e.g., a clip snapping or a bracket bending).
What is evaluated | Methods | Problems | Possible solutions |
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Manufacturability Analysis
Design for Manufacture and Assembly (DFM & DFA)
This is to check if a part can actually be manufactured using a real production process (like molding or machining).
It is necessary to avoid designs that look good in CAD but are impossible or expensive to produce.
What is evaluated | Methods | Problems | Possible solutions |
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Assembly and Tolerance Analysis
This is to check if parts will fit together correctly in real life, considering small manufacturing variations.
It is necessary to avoid assembly problems like parts not fitting or being too loose.
What is evaluated | Methods | Problems | Possible solutions |
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Thermal and Environmental Behavior
This is to check how heat, cold, and environment affect a part over time.
It is necessary to prevent deformation or failure caused by temperature or environmental conditions.
What is evaluated | Methods | Problems | Possible solutions |
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Cosmetic and Defect Prediction
This is to check whether the final part will have visible surface defects after manufacturing.
It is necessary to ensure the product looks acceptable and has no visible flaws.
What is evaluated | Methods | Problems | Possible solutions |
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Metrology, Assembly and Automation
This is to define how parts are measured, assembled, and handled in automated manufacturing systems such as robotic lines, fixtures, and inspection machines.
It is necessary to make sure that:
- Parts can be accurately measured and verified
- Parts can be assembled consistently
- Parts can be handled by machines without failure or misalignment
What is evaluated | Methods | Problems | Possible solutions |
Metrology (measurement)
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Assembly behavior
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Automation interaction
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”High” Standards & Codes For Technical Drawing
Standards and codes are formal rule systems that define how technical information (dimensions, tolerances, symbols, and annotations) must be represented in engineering drawings.
These rules make sure that a drawing created in one company can be correctly understood by manufacturers, inspectors, and suppliers worldwide. Without them, drawings would be ambiguous and inconsistent.
- A code is a set of specifications for the analysis, design, manufacture, and construction of something.
- A standard is a set of specifications for parts, materials, or processes intended to achieve uniformity, efficiency and specific quality.
Standards for Technical Drawings:
These are the most frequently used standards in mechanical and product design:
| Standard | Area | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| ISO 128 | General drawing rules | Views, sections, layout |
| ISO 129 | Dimensioning | How dimensions are placed and written |
| ISO 1101 | GD&T | Geometric tolerances (form, position, etc.) |
| ISO 1302 | Surface texture | Roughness and surface finish symbols |
| ISO 2768 | General tolerances | Default tolerances when not specified |
| ISO 2553 | Welding symbols | Representation of welds in drawings |
| ASME Y14.5 | GD&T | Alternative GD&T system (widely used in US industry) |
Standards define how engineering intent is communicated, not just how geometry is drawn.
Standards control elements such as:
- Dimension placement and formatting
- Tolerance definition and interpretation
- GD&T symbols and rules
- Surface finish indication
- Welding symbols and joint definitions
- Section views and projection methods
No single standard defines a full drawing; they work together!
Codes For Technical Drawings:
These are the most frequently used standards in mechanical and product design:
| Code | Area | What it controls | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|
| ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code (BPVC) | Pressure systems | Safety of pressure vessels and boilers | Tanks, reactors, pipelines |
| Eurocode (EN 1990–1999) | Structural engineering | Building and civil structure safety | Buildings, bridges |
| ASME B31.3 | Process piping | Design of industrial piping systems | Chemical plants, refineries |
| AWS D1.1 | Welding | Welding quality and structural integrity | Steel structures, construction |
| ISO 3834 | Welding quality management | Welding process quality requirements | Industrial fabrication |
Codes define the minimum safety, performance, and compliance requirements that an engineering design must satisfy before it can be manufactured, approved, or operated.
Codes control elements such as:
- Minimum safety factors for structural integrity
- Maximum allowable stress, pressure, or load limits
- Mandatory design requirements for critical systems (e.g., piping, pressure vessels, structures)
- Material qualification and certification requirements
- Welding procedure qualification and inspection requirements
- Testing and inspection obligations before approval or operation
No single code defines a complete product or drawing! Codes are typically applied to specific systems or components, and multiple codes may apply simultaneously depending on the industry and application.
Standards Organizations (Technical Communication Systems)
| Organization | Region | Focus Area | Typical Standards Produced |
|---|---|---|---|
| ISO (International Organization for Standardization) | Global | Engineering drawing, GD&T, manufacturing rules | ISO 1101, ISO 129, ISO 2768 |
| ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) | USA / Global | Mechanical design standards | ASME Y14.5 (GD&T), drawing rules |
| DIN (Deutsches Institut für Normung) | Germany | Industrial and mechanical standards | DIN ISO equivalents, legacy DIN standards |
| BSI (British Standards Institution) | UK | National + international standards | BS standards, ISO-adopted versions |
| ANSI (American National Standards Institute) | USA | Coordination of US standards | Oversees ASME/other US standards adoption |
| IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) | Global | Electrical and electronic standards | Electrical symbols, systems, safety |
Code Organizations (Regulatory / Mandatory Requirements)
| Organization | Region | Focus Area | Typical Codes Produced |
|---|---|---|---|
| ASME (American Society of Mechanical Engineers) | USA / Global | Pressure systems, mechanical safety | BPVC (Boilers & Pressure Vessels), piping codes |
| ISO (International Organization for Standardization)* | Global | Some safety-related codes + mixed use | Various sector codes (limited compared to standards role) |
| EN / CEN (European Committee for Standardization) | Europe | Structural and safety compliance | Eurocodes, harmonized safety codes |
| AWS (American Welding Society) | USA / Global | Welding safety and qualification | Structural welding codes (e.g. D1.1) |
| API (American Petroleum Institute) | Global oil & gas | Industrial safety in energy systems | Pipeline and refinery safety codes |
| IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission) | Global | Electrical safety systems | Electrical installation safety requirements |
*Note! ISO is primarily a standards body, but some documents are used in regulatory/code contexts depending on industry.
Computer assisted Design – CAD software
CAD software for technical drawings is typically split into 2D drafting tools and 3D parametric CAD systems with drawing modules.
Most industrial workflows today are 3D-first, with 2D drawings generated from the model.
2D CAD Drafting Software (Direct technical drawing)
These tools focus on drawing creation, not model-based design.
Used mainly for pure drafting, schematics, and legacy workflows:
| Software | Type | Typical Use |
| AutoCAD | 2D + basic 3D | General technical drawings, architecture, mechanical drafting |
| DraftSight | 2D CAD | DWG-based technical drawings, alternative to AutoCAD |
| LibreCAD | 2D CAD (open source) | Simple mechanical drawings, education |
| MicroStation | 2D/3D CAD | Civil engineering, infrastructure drawings |
3D Parametric CAD (Industry Standard for Mechanical Design)
Drawings are generated from the 3D model, ensuring consistency and update control.
Used to build 3D models and automatically generate technical drawings.
| Software | Type | Typical Use |
| SolidWorks | 3D parametric CAD | Mechanical design, manufacturing drawings, assemblies |
| Autodesk Inventor | 3D parametric CAD | Mechanical parts, assemblies, technical documentation |
| Siemens NX | High-end CAD/CAM/CAE | Aerospace, automotive, advanced engineering |
| CATIA | High-end CAD | Aerospace, automotive (e.g., aircraft structures) |
| PTC Creo | 3D parametric CAD | Industrial design, complex assemblies |
| Fusion 360 | Cloud CAD/CAM | Small-to-medium mechanical projects, startups |
Specialized / Hybrid CAD Systems
Used when drawings are tied to manufacturing or simulation workflows:
| Software | Focus | Typical Use |
| Solid Edge | Synchronous + parametric CAD | Flexible design updates, mechanical engineering |
| FreeCAD | Open-source parametric CAD | Education, small projects, prototyping |
| Onshape | Cloud-based CAD | Collaborative engineering teams |
| BricsCAD | DWG-based 2D/3D CAD | AutoCAD alternative with 3D capabilities |
Conclusion
Technical drawings remain a core communication tool in mechanical engineering, but their role is increasingly tied to digital design workflows rather than standalone documentation. In modern practice, drawings primarily formalize key manufacturing requirements such as dimensions, tolerances, surface finish, and inspection criteria, while the main design intent is carried by 3D CAD models and validated through simulation and manufacturing systems.
Standards and codes ensure that this information is interpreted consistently across design, production, and inspection. However, real manufacturability is determined not only by what is specified in the drawing, but also by process limitations, material behavior, and assembly constraints.
Overall, technical drawings should be understood as part of a larger engineering system that connects design intent to physical production. Their value lies in clarity, control of critical features, and contractual definition!

