@@1styearengineeringdrawing182 May I ask, in an engineering context, why we’re concerned with dividing a circle into 24 equal parts? (i apologize if I sounded gruff earlier)
@@podboq2 Actually dividing into 12 parts is enough for engineering drawing. I attempted dividing into 24 part in response to a viewer's request, I think. It is more useful in some of the art works. By the way, the Ashok chakra at the centre of Indian flag also has 24 spokes, so that was another motivation!👍 Thanks for the conversation!
Fantastic, so clearly explained. Thank you
👍
Exactly what I was looking for, thank you!
It help me a lot.. as a designing student, I got some project, and need 24 partition..
I tryed without protector
can we do the same thing to 8cm circle?
Yes, you can take circle of any diameter. Follow the same process. 👍
oh ok thank you!!!!
Thanks for teach
Welcome!👍
Thank you! Helped me so much 🤍😁
👍👍
thx sir
👍
Thanks sir
👍
Thanks bro
Without protractor??
You can use protractor or only compass, either way.👍
Thank you sir
👍
Thanks 👌👌
👍
🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏💯
👍
😊
you don’t need a straight edge at all, no kind of ruler, or protractor to get a 24 equal parts.
Thanks for your nice comments. Kindly clarify your comment.✔
@@1styearengineeringdrawing182 Here we go, FINALLY!!
th-cam.com/video/5fdK43cjMmw/w-d-xo.html
@@1styearengineeringdrawing182 May I ask, in an engineering context, why we’re concerned with dividing a circle into 24 equal parts?
(i apologize if I sounded gruff earlier)
@@podboq2 Actually dividing into 12 parts is enough for engineering drawing. I attempted dividing into 24 part in response to a viewer's request, I think. It is more useful in some of the art works. By the way, the Ashok chakra at the centre of Indian flag also has 24 spokes, so that was another motivation!👍 Thanks for the conversation!
@@1styearengineeringdrawing182 What kind of engineering drawing? What are we engineering? I did read about the chakra and the flag earlier.
how about 28
use protractor method because you can not divide 360 degree into 28 even whole numbers, 360/28 = 12.85.
This does not help at all for some reason
Thanks sir
👍
Thanks sir
👍