I am looking for examples or names of a type of view that shows a device as if you are looking at it when it it mounted...
The device I am trying to draw is mounted in a bracket which is then mounted inside a cabinet 9 times. We need to show how it is mounted but also the device terminals. My problem is that when it is mounted, the terminals are on the back, facing the inside of the cabinet and a plate with a label is on the front. I was working with our standard rear view when I realized the terminals would be technically "mirrored" since when mounted we basically need to show it as if we ar seeing through the front of device...
I am horrible at explaining things and my coworkers don't seem to understand my issue. Is this a type of standard diagram that is known? Or would I just be better off leaving a note that states the device mounts the other way and terminals are swapped?
I don't want the diagram to show +/- terminals mixed up and have it installed incorrectly. We are also required to use specific colored wires and if they are shown to the wrong terminals we could be in a lot of trouble.
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by jseefdrumr. Go to Solution.
Hi there,
You might take a look at the WIPEOUT tool and the DRAWING ORDER tool in the Help section. The Wipeout tool for example can be used to fill a rectangle, like the frame/footprint of a breaker or relay. Functionally it hides whatever is behind it. So with the outline of a relay, filled with the Wipeout tool, when it is placed on a panel layout it will hide or mask the section of din rail it is mounted over. Which brings us to the Drawing Order tool. If you want to add terminals to the relay you can lay them right on top if it. Now, still thinking in 2D, you have layers like sheets of glass. You have terminals, the outline of the relay with the Wipeout feature and din rail. Playing with the Drawing Order tools you can shift the graphics to be hidden behind/below something or visible above/in-front of other graphics. Very cool tool for panel layout foot prints.
Good luck
The device you are describing sounds like a panel/door mounted device.
You are trying to do several views of the one device within the one block.
I have two solutions that I use depending on the drawing required.
Solution 1 is to just show the front door view with no information on the terminal layout.
Solution 2 is to do a REAR view of the device with the terminals shown.
I normally use the first solution and don't provide the electricians with the terminal layout as they are quite able to read the relay terminal markings to find the correct terminal. The only time I provide the Rear view is if the client wants a Wiring Diagram along with a schematic dwg.
You may have to do the front view without tying to footprints to the schematic to allow the rear view to be linked and any wiring information to be shown.
Check the website of the device's manufacturer as they may provide CAD dwgs of both the front and rear of the device. Most of the manufacturers of the devices I use do so.
Regards Brad
Brad Coleman, Electrical Draftsman
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Thank you for your response...
@Icemanau wrote:The device you are describing sounds like a panel/door mounted device.
You are trying to do several views of the one device within the one block.
I have two solutions that I use depending on the drawing required.
Solution 1 is to just show the front door view with no information on the terminal layout.
Solution 2 is to do a REAR view of the device with the terminals shown.
I normally use the first solution and don't provide the electricians with the terminal layout as they are quite able to read the relay terminal markings to find the correct terminal. The only time I provide the Rear view is if the client wants a Wiring Diagram along with a schematic dwg.
You may have to do the front view without tying to footprints to the schematic to allow the rear view to be linked and any wiring information to be shown.
Check the website of the device's manufacturer as they may provide CAD dwgs of both the front and rear of the device. Most of the manufacturers of the devices I use do so.
Regards Brad
Thanks for your responses... The device is actually a monitor module mounting in a module cabinet. We are the manufacturer and the CAD we have shows only the rear view which works for diagrams where it does not need to be shown in the bracket. In the attached image, I have drawn up a very generic layout of what I am talking about. Not only do I need to show how the module mounts within the bracket and cabinet, but also how the device is tied into what it is specifically monitoring... Since the module mounts in the bracket in the panel with the label facing out (the "FRONT"), our terminal/rear view is not an accurate representation of how the wires will be terminated. Does that make sense?? I am worried I am making a mountain out of a mole hill but I am 99% sure our customer will have a fit if they see something is off (even though they will KNOW how to wire it correctly, regardless if the diagram is wrong)
EDIT: I should reiterate that what I am looking for is any other examples of this type of view if there is one, or if there is a technical term for this specific view - I don't really want to note that the view is "SEE-THROUGH" 😞
Ahh, thanks for clarifying that.
The correct term you are looking for is elevation.
The current standard is to draw an elevation for each required view.
This equates to (normally) Front, Top, Rear & Side. Sometimes a Bottom and the opposite Side are included depending on how complex the shape of the item is. These are the standard views for almost everything with the addition of an X-Ray and Exploded views for those items requiring internal or construction details.
Another option you could look at is a 3D version of the file which can be rotated by your client. ACADE still contains all the original ACAD functions including 3D rendering and such if you don't have Inventor. This view would be able to show everything correctly.
Regards Brad
Brad Coleman, Electrical Draftsman
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Thank you Brad & Jim! We do have typical details included with our construction set that includes an exploded view as well as a front/rear view. I like youridea of showing it as hidden with this note:
@jseefdrumr wrote:
*leave the terminal numbers where they are, as this is their actual position when viewing from the front
*for absolute clarity, I would still include a note stating that "TERMINALS SHOWN IN ACTUAL POSITION AS VIEWED FROM FRONT"
Hope this helps,
I think this is the route I will go, and still reference our typical detail of the device that is already included. Thanks very much, you two!
Would the term X-Ray view not fit here? I "googled" it and of course all I got was medical xrays - I was thinking cross section as well but that wont fit either... anyway it's probably not important as long as I include the aforementioned note.
I wish we had the ability to use 3D versions, our industry and the industries we work with are mostly working with Revit and while I love AutoCAD, I don't want us to get left behind. Thanks again!
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