It's been a few months, so probably too late to help you, but I did just release a new video with more difficult hidden lines problems. Thank you for the suggestion - it was a good one. I have section views on my to do list ... but it will probably be a few more months again before I get to that one. Link to new missing line video: th-cam.com/video/3YHQlrEi5Os/w-d-xo.html
Man! Holy smokes. I just started my first CAD class, professor is awesome but I couldn’t grasp this. The way you explained how to sweep the images in comparison was so much easier to understand. Thank you.
You're welcome. If you check my playlist for this class, you'll see I have multiple videos on this topic Missing Lines, and a similar topic Missing Views - and I use different techniques in different videos. There's lots of ways to "solve" engineering drawings, and you never know which one is going to click with you, so it helps to see lots of different approaches. Have a great semester!
The way you describe is much more better than my professor. Thank you very much for your effort. I just subscribe your channel. Please upload more videos with complicated problems.
I'm actually working on a brand new Missing Lines video right now with VERY challenging problems. It probably won't go up for another month though :(. If you check my recent uploads, you should see a lot of brand new engineering graphics videos about Missing Views and also making Orthographic Projections from an Isometric view, which will probably be the topics you get to next in your course, so they may help you out a lot.
Idk why but this is really hard for me...I try to pause the video before you give away the answer and test my knowledge yet somehow I am always getting it wrong :/
Spatial Reasoning is VERY difficult. Not just to do, but also to teach. Please check my Graphics Playlist, I have 2 or 3 other Missing Line videos - but since I didn't make them back to back (made them each about a year apart), I think I use different methods and explain them each differently. If the explanation from this video doesn't help as much as you need, maybe those different explanations will do better. Good luck.
Yes, good strategy is to wait until after the course is over, then forget it all :P (though, maybe by then, you'll have learned it solid and won't be able to forget even if you try?)
You're welcome Colton, I'm really happy this helped you. If you'd like to test yourself with a more advanced version of this video with harder examples (oblique surfaces, round surfaces, etc), check my channel page and you'll see it in my "Engineering Graphics" playlist.
I'm not sure if I understand what you mean about the right side being "enlarged", but if you are mean that the right side view is entirely missing, like you only have 2 views, and need to draw the 3rd from scratch - then I have another video that will be helpful to you called "How to Draw a Missing Orthographic View" th-cam.com/video/Wa9N6PE0h5k/w-d-xo.html
Ah - I have a different video that exactly answers this question. You can find it in my channel page, or just do a youtube search for "How to draw a missing orthographic view" which is the title of the video, and I think you should find it easily.
2 things: First - If you think this video was on the right track of starting to help you, I do have a playlist of about 20 videos that will probably help you out for every variation of drawing type you will likely see your first few months, so work your way through all the practice drawings in that playlist. Second - Don't just passively watch the videos. Watching will always make it seem easy ... but that's because it's easy for me. You need to always be checking whether YOU can make the drawings. When you start a video, pause it when you see the problem - then try to draw it on your own. Once you finish, or get stuck, then watch the video. You will learn SOOOOO much more this way. All the parts you got stuck on, the video explanation will make so much more sense and you'll pay attention to it so much more, since after you try it yourself, you'll know better which parts are the hard parts.
I think just the 1 missing line on the right view is all I see. The top view is just a big empty rectangle, which is looking at the top of the sloped surface. The right view missing line divides it in half, top rectangle is looking at the slope from the side, bottom rectangle looks at the short vertical face that is the short vertical line on the right side of the front view. Talking about drawings feels really complicated when I type it, hope that made sense.
If you check my channel page, I have a Graphics playlist with I think 3 different "missing lines" another 3 "missing views" and about 3 more "how to draw Isometric views" videos. Don't just watch the videos. Pause the videos, make the drawing yourself, then watch the video to check, not just your answer, but your method and thinking. If you only watch, you'll think you are learning, but you won't learn. You can't learn drawing by watching drawing - you need to draw yourself
Please include complicated problems and sectional views
It's been a few months, so probably too late to help you, but I did just release a new video with more difficult hidden lines problems. Thank you for the suggestion - it was a good one. I have section views on my to do list ... but it will probably be a few more months again before I get to that one. Link to new missing line video: th-cam.com/video/3YHQlrEi5Os/w-d-xo.html
Man! Holy smokes. I just started my first CAD class, professor is awesome but I couldn’t grasp this. The way you explained how to sweep the images in comparison was so much easier to understand. Thank you.
You're welcome. If you check my playlist for this class, you'll see I have multiple videos on this topic Missing Lines, and a similar topic Missing Views - and I use different techniques in different videos. There's lots of ways to "solve" engineering drawings, and you never know which one is going to click with you, so it helps to see lots of different approaches. Have a great semester!
The way you describe is much more better than my professor. Thank you very much for your effort. I just subscribe your channel. Please upload more videos with complicated problems.
I'm actually working on a brand new Missing Lines video right now with VERY challenging problems. It probably won't go up for another month though :(. If you check my recent uploads, you should see a lot of brand new engineering graphics videos about Missing Views and also making Orthographic Projections from an Isometric view, which will probably be the topics you get to next in your course, so they may help you out a lot.
You are so underrated !!
Maybe just "undiscovered"
Idk why but this is really hard for me...I try to pause the video before you give away the answer and test my knowledge yet somehow I am always getting it wrong :/
Spatial Reasoning is VERY difficult. Not just to do, but also to teach. Please check my Graphics Playlist, I have 2 or 3 other Missing Line videos - but since I didn't make them back to back (made them each about a year apart), I think I use different methods and explain them each differently. If the explanation from this video doesn't help as much as you need, maybe those different explanations will do better. Good luck.
I can't forget this video. Through out my engineering course❤❤❤
Yes, good strategy is to wait until after the course is over, then forget it all :P (though, maybe by then, you'll have learned it solid and won't be able to forget even if you try?)
@@BrianBernardEngineering exactly sir. Tanks for the words of encouragement.
Thank you so much for the video, it helped a lot and I'll finish the rest of the playlist.
I try to keep the videos short, so hopefully watching several of them won't be too big of a time burden.
This helped immensely
I gave TA Serenity a treat and said it was from you. Glad we could help.
This video helped so much! Thank you!
You're welcome Colton, I'm really happy this helped you. If you'd like to test yourself with a more advanced version of this video with harder examples (oblique surfaces, round surfaces, etc), check my channel page and you'll see it in my "Engineering Graphics" playlist.
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS!
you're welcome
How about having a top and front views. For the right side is enlarged. What’s the process
I'm not sure if I understand what you mean about the right side being "enlarged", but if you are mean that the right side view is entirely missing, like you only have 2 views, and need to draw the 3rd from scratch - then I have another video that will be helpful to you called "How to Draw a Missing Orthographic View" th-cam.com/video/Wa9N6PE0h5k/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for the information. I’m still having difficulty with multi-viewing and understanding third angle-viewing/ orthographic projection.
Thank you !
I'm glad it helped, thanks for watching.
Sir can you make a video of the same examples with first angle projection
I have added this to my list ... but I don't want you to get your hopes up for it coming soon, I have a long list. Thank you for the suggestion.
@@BrianBernardEngineering thanks for answering
How would I approach a problem that only gives me the top and front view?
Ah - I have a different video that exactly answers this question. You can find it in my channel page, or just do a youtube search for "How to draw a missing orthographic view" which is the title of the video, and I think you should find it easily.
l want to have an A+ at this course what should l do because l stared to get depressed 😢😢
l can't pass the exam
2 things: First - If you think this video was on the right track of starting to help you, I do have a playlist of about 20 videos that will probably help you out for every variation of drawing type you will likely see your first few months, so work your way through all the practice drawings in that playlist. Second - Don't just passively watch the videos. Watching will always make it seem easy ... but that's because it's easy for me. You need to always be checking whether YOU can make the drawings. When you start a video, pause it when you see the problem - then try to draw it on your own. Once you finish, or get stuck, then watch the video. You will learn SOOOOO much more this way. All the parts you got stuck on, the video explanation will make so much more sense and you'll pay attention to it so much more, since after you try it yourself, you'll know better which parts are the hard parts.
i personally think the 11th problem, i think there is something missing on the right projection, no? the triangle
I think just the 1 missing line on the right view is all I see. The top view is just a big empty rectangle, which is looking at the top of the sloped surface. The right view missing line divides it in half, top rectangle is looking at the slope from the side, bottom rectangle looks at the short vertical face that is the short vertical line on the right side of the front view. Talking about drawings feels really complicated when I type it, hope that made sense.
sir i need help with this one🥹
a. missing lines
b. isometric sketch
If you check my channel page, I have a Graphics playlist with I think 3 different "missing lines" another 3 "missing views" and about 3 more "how to draw Isometric views" videos. Don't just watch the videos. Pause the videos, make the drawing yourself, then watch the video to check, not just your answer, but your method and thinking. If you only watch, you'll think you are learning, but you won't learn. You can't learn drawing by watching drawing - you need to draw yourself