Projection lines are used to establish relationships of part featurues between rotated veiws of the same drawing.
The type of map projection used by pilots is called a Polar Projection. It shows the Earth from one of the two poles, which helps show what is known as The Great Circle Route. This states that if you live on a rounded object such as the Earth, you travel on a curved line. This makes a Polar Projection the best choice and most commonly used map projection used by pilots.
true
High oblique includes the horizon and low does not.
Radio Mapping.
oblique
The difference is that the Isometric projection shows more and accurate drawing than the Oblique project which is just a pictorial method.
It is a 3D representation in two dimensions. Width and height are drawn on horizontal and vertical lines and depth is on an angled line, usually 30 or 45 degrees.
One remaining drawing conventions is Oblique drawing - In this convention the angles used are 45 degrees and 90 degrees. The only difference between the two named styles is in the scale of the dimension going away from the viewer. This first example is Cavalier Oblique and shows the full scale (1:1) in the axis Cabinet Oblique' In Cabinet oblique the scale (depth) is halved whilst in Cavalier oblique the depth scale is the same as in the X and Y directions.
first angle projection and third angle projection.
no
Oblique cavalier drawings tend to appear distorted and elongated. They are not considered as true projections despite being dimensionally correct.
To get the Sternal projection off of the hear shadow.
The hand will need to be parallel to the IR. Positioning of the fingers for PA oblique and lateral projections are used to demonstrate the interphalangeal joints and spaces.
oblique
true
Massimo Scolari has written: 'Il disegno obliquo' -- subject(s): Composition (Art), History, Perspective, Space (Architecture) 'Oblique drawing' -- subject(s): Axonometric projection, Oblique projection, Technique, Drawing