when reading a blueprint, a general tolerance would apply for all dimensions that are not individually identified. eg, all tolerances are +\- .030" General tolerances are normally found in the information blocks of the blueprint. If for example a tighter tolerance is required, then a specific tolerance is noted for certain areas of the blueprint. These tolerances are normally found beside the affected area.
kuch nahi hota hai
the difrrence is that one starts with an s and the other starts with an oalso they are spelt diffrentlyso does this answer your question Kane
yes
A technical drawing is drawn precisely to a scale. Measurements taken from the drawing can be scaled up to produce or build a full size structure or machine, etc. A freehand drawing could be a simple sketch, detailed drawing, rough doodle, of a subject and is classed as a picture.
"Simple DDA" does not require special skills for implementation.
IDK that is why i askedGeneral tolerance refers to all untoleranced dimensions, and should be covered by a note on the drawing, eg tolerance unless noted otherwise plus or minus 0.25 mmSpecific tolerance will be included with the individual dimension, either as dimension limits or dimension plus tolerance.
The difference between a graph and a diagram is as follows: a diagram is a chart which shows a drawing and a graph is a graph with lines or bars indicating something specific in numbers.
An isometric is more specific
One is colored in, and the other isn't..
kuch nahi hota hai
Interpretation
drawing from observation will be realistic, drawimg from memery will automaticly use the symbol systom.
For a normal deck of cards, the answer is none.
if this is for homwork guess
Shown in drawing and shown on drawing can mean the same thing. These statements would both indicate that the concept is shown somewhere within the drawing.
the difference is stechn is when its light drawn is when its dark!!
I think both are same. There is difference between isometric view and isometric drawing that is of size.