Thanks for watching! And don't forget that the bonus video on model-based definition and statistical tolerance analysis is on Nebula - nebula.tv/videos/the-efficient-engineer-the-future-of-engineering-drawings.
Hello. The knowledge from your youtube channel is very useful. I think it needs to be spread to more people. I want to translate your video into Vietnamese and post it on my youtube channel. I will quote the source at your channel
i'm confused when you display the 6 total views at 3:59. shouldn't the right view have the sloping face on its left side? and the notches visible in the top/bottom and rear/front views should be mirrored to each other? when you deconstruct the 6 views from the cube shape, some of the views are flipped the wrong way, so we're seeing the image from behind, rather than how the camera saw it from the side it was taken. right?
Hello there! I am a mechanical engineer, i work as a project engineer in HVAC industry. I have been watching your videos since you started making them. I am very frustrated on the fact that our teachers wasted so much of our time, energy and resources. I thank you for all your efforts, your videos are unparalleled, simple and detailed. More power to you. Keep up the good work!
I really love this field of mechanical engineering, and I hope work as a mechanical engineer (Hvac designer), can you help me please to keep through this road? 🥺
As a technical drawing and CAD teacher I really admire your work. It is top notch job - absolutely profesional, detailed and what is the most important thing - easy to understand. I'm recomending your channel to all my students.
This comment section is full of smart people, working as engineer's, draftsman, and such, I personally, dont have a job, but want to become an aeronotical engineer someday, i really like how these videos explain it simply, and in great detail.
At this point every undergrad engineering course is making use of your videos as resources we have to study, and I am all for it. Hope you don’t mind unis using your material without your permission cause it’s so much beyond anything else that exists to explain these concepts in quality and clarity. Thank you
Speaking as an MSc in Process Engineering, I have no idea why these stuff was never explained to us so well like it was here. I've spent 4.5 years in university to then find out I don't know anything and actually learn some fundamental engineering concepts from this channel. Thank you!
the greatest teacher is ALLAH, he guides us from the secrets of the universe to simple actions, which no school or university can teach you and our emotional perception is a miracle given by ALLAH
I am studying mechanical engineering and I really love and appreciate your work (and art)! I often rewatch your videos to recall and internalize. Looking forward to further content! :)
@@yepi3345 I'll also bet the US is far behind much of the world because of affirmative action programs. Even our high schools are failing because of teachers unions. This will eventually ruin our country.
This is a trip down memory lane for me. I was an electro-mechanical designer for over 30 years in Silicon Valley from 1973 to 2008 creating drawings/designs from simple and highly complex circuit boards to creating machining drawings for high explosive outer shells for nuclear warheads to hard disc drives, to audio cassettes to RNA and DNA life science laboratory equipment. It's a wonderful career and no matter where you enter the industry I should think it quite rewarding. If you're new to this stay the course!!! And to the women out there have no doubts you can and will excel at this!!!
As an electrical engineer, I highly appreciate the high quality of your videos on mechanical engineering subjects, giving great insight to a person starting to learn about this.
There's so much high quality content on TH-cam for Math, Physics, Biology and Computer Science About damn time engineering got some love. Thank you for your amazing work!
@@dheomodi If you're asking for engineering related channels, there's Real Engineering, Stuff Made Here, BPS Space, Tech Ingredients, EEVBlog, ElectroBoom and a lot more I can't remember. When it comes to Math, 3Blue1Brown and Numberphile are my go to, 3Blue1Brown had an event called "summer of math exposition" and the videos that came out of it are all amazing. For the other sciences, there are honestly so many high quality channels that I can't remember any off the top of my head.
True that. there is a lot of good quality content online. The good thing about engineering is that the principles are the same across the world even though local design codes can be different..
I am not an engineer or doing anything related to engineering drawing, I'm just a curious soul!... and i can tell that this is high quality content because you explained everything so eloquently that i even understood and followed along easily!... great stuff... I'm really sure people doing these things appreciate your content a lot!... big ups to you!
I'm now 77, and all my life I've been involved with engineering, drawings, and drafting. I ran a large drafting department for years. My High School Drafting Teacher told me I'd never make it working in engineering or let alone as a draftsman. My first job a draftsman! He told me that after I brought him a Drawing I made when I was ten years old, it looked exactly like these drawings. It was a detailed engineering drawing of a Spark Plug, an Aircraft Bracket, Moral here....If you have any fascination or feel like you'd want to draw like this..GO FOR IT..
im an mechnical engineer for a bus company in australia, this is the right way of interpreting the engineering drawings, we used third projections a lot in australia but you chosen the left view, i chose the right view as must display more solid lines instead of hidden lines, nice work!
As a just recent graduate in Mech i found the videos you make as boon for those who wish to summarize, revise and also have intuitive fundamental knowledge of the concepts that they didnt had before!
I am an aspiring engineer who has always struggled with maintaining a college education, both financially and academically. I found your videos on Nebula and wanted to show you support here as well. Your lessons are clear, concise, and easy for me to follow. Thank you for making these.
I'm a person like you, I've seen something in the eyes of future engineers that they study engineering in any field for financial gain, and I don't think it's fair, after all, our profession is to fill the world with brilliance and innovation, isn't it
As a mechanical engineering student I've seen a lot of videos, books, lectures alongside my main courses in college, but your videos has always been the best and most informative. Thank you for teaching and inspiring!
Electrical engineer here. Until recently, I spent most of my time at work electrically testing components against their wiring diagrams, which means looking up a ton of mechanical drawings in the process of trying to find electrical information. It's wild to think of how much detail I missed or glossed over, day in and day out. Thanks for explaining!
I will strongly recommend that you should do a complete series of videos on engineering drawings. Topics like GD&T, tolerances, fits, etc. need a thorough explanation.
This is ESSENTIAL for draftsmen and engineers. My college instructor told his classes: "Everyone starts out with an A. If I have to ask a question regarding your drawing, that's a B. Two questions is a C. Three questions is a D. Four questions is an F." Dr. Crist
I wish I had these videos back in 2007 when I started the mechanical engineering course... a great resource for engineers for grasping the fundamentals.
Hi there. I'm an engineering student (shipbuilding & ocean engineering). I find that your videos are really good for learning and understanding. It's been really helpful. The animation and visualization on your videos are also amazing! I wish you all the best for life and I thank you for your contents.
Hi there , I went through college for Tool & Die Design and went directly into the military gas turbine engine field where I was for 16 years . After which I worked for various aircraft and aerospace companies totaling 40 years in the industry . Blue print reading is fun and interesting and GD&T also . I still have my drawing board . I use it for a large computer table . Good luck to all in the future and take care .
This is my favorite part of enginering... Drawings. You can take earphones, play some bangers in it, "shut off" your brain and just draw. Ofcourse, its not a braindead activity, but at least for me, it is so relaxing and fun. Great video ;)
I am by no means an engineer, but rather an artist. This really helped me understand how to draw believable technical drawings and blueprints for sci-fi projects
As a manufacturing engineer, this video is so helpful. School doesn't teach you how to understand GD&t and engineering drawing skills which are essential to most mechanical and engineering jobs and usually you have to do training.
I am an engineering student attending first grade of a higher techincal college in austria, and I loved the video. It was especially interesting to see the difference in the standards, and this was just so compact and informational.
Can't appreciate enough how elegantly the topic is explained. It is so soothing to watch the video. The animations are just perfect. Although the topic is too vast to be covered in a 22 min video, but still the basics are explained beautifully. Take a bow man....
As a design engineer I can tell you that this is one of the best videos that I have ever seen explaining an engineering drawing! Just a quick note, as per ASME Y14.5 the symbol in 18:50 is called “Position” no “True position,” true position is the theoretical exact position aka the perfect position in the CAD, and the symbol is referring to the Geometric Characteristic of Position. This is a very common mistake in the engineering world
Just looking at that GD&T tol callout and the C datum seems redundant too. also the callout of 8 dia being +/- 0.2 when its already called in the callout on 0.2
This is the video I have always needed!!! As a Technology and Engineering teacher I appreciate you making this video. The explanations and visuals are awesome and are really going to help my students! Thanks!
This video made me realise that simply because someone is smart, doesn't mean they are a good teacher. I am incredibly thankful this channel exists to freely step in when the universtiy I am paying to go to is failing me.
Na koniec mój "ulubiony" przedmiot. Czekanie do sesji nic nie da, jeden rysunek zajmuje jedną noc, a w semestrze było ich chyba 12. Literki duże mają mieć 7mm, małe 5mm, pomocnicze duże 5mm, małe 3,5mm, odmierz pół milimetra, kupiłem sobie szablony, dzisiaj już tego nie kupisz. Agnieszka nie ma złych uczniów, są źli nauczyciele. Ciebie wspominam dobrze, bardzo mnie motywujesz, no chcę się przed Tobą popisać.
Dude.... It's absolutely frustrating that my college didn't do as good of a job at teaching me these applicable that these videos do. I've heard about most of this stuff and used it on my own but really felt like there were parts I didn't understand. These clear up a lot in a way I fully understand and I really really appreciate it. Thank you for bringing mechanical engineering into the 21st century
I'm currently studying Computer Engineering and these drawings always amaze me. My father works as a mechanical engineer in the mining industry and I have seen some of the drawings on his computer. They are very complex for me to understand. Perhaps now I would have a better understanding haha.
Even though I am an optical/electronics engineer, I enjoy your videos and find a lot of it useful. This drawing video was awesome. I learned drafting in middle school in 1977 and now use Solidworks a lot in my work.
A good visual analogy to help remember first and third angle projections is this: with first-angle, you rotate the object like it is on a hill; with third-angle, you rotate the object like it is in a bowl. Edit: I work on sheet metal. So, it's awesome to see how standardized all this is. I'm going to show this video to new guys to get them caught up. You'd be surprised how little first and third angle projections are discussed in some shops. It can mean the difference between forming good parts and backwards ones....
Thanks for this amazing video, I started yesterday a course called Fundamentals of mechanical engineering where we will use Solidworks, so this video literally came at the best time
Wow, your illustrations are fascinating. I wish I had access to that kind of content back when I was graduating chemical engineering. I do share it with the freshmen so they can have a better time understanding the concepts.
👍🏻 The compact and absolut clear content of information including the art of presentation of this tutorial undoubtedly deserves a kind of "Oscar for teachers"! 🏆
I'm from Russia and studying engineering. It is interesting to see that drawings can be done a little differently. For example, 12:09 there are no such or similar designations in the ESKD standards. As a result, we indicate the dimensions of the "recesses" (or chamfers) with arrows. But we have pluses: we have any thread designated as in ISO (М30х3 or G12-½, Tr12x2,5...) and first view projection by default.
One the Greatest Video about Engineering Drawing, For me I have learned as much i have learned in my initial 3 Months of Engineering Drawing Subject in my Diploma Engineering Course. Loved it, Waiting for more if this ...!!! ❤
I just started machining parts as a hobby and I like to draw plans before making most of what I want. Its so rewarding to draw plans by hand and then make the parts afterwards. Thanks to you my drawings are going to be much better now! Cheers
This is a great video for all students and engineers to watch. Professors should show this video to their students when talking about how to create engineering drawings.
Fantastic video! This guy deserves an award for the best teacher!!! what a fabulous way of teaching!!! mind blowing super!!! well done. lots of love from Pakistan
I graduated months ago studying Petroleum Engineering. In my country, all Engineering courses take a minimum of 5yrs to complete. In level 2, all Engineering departments studied the same course so I did course both mechanical and civil engineering courses. we were mostly just lumped together and the course lecturer didn't really care since some of us "may not need it" apart from the Mechanical and civil engineering students. I had so source for videos online to understand the course and I'm gutted I just got to see this channel recommend by TH-cam 6months after graduation.
I do this daily just like that. But it took lot of efforts. This guy explained so well. Keep it up. 😀. If you are my teacher. I bow down and accept learn manythings.
This is amazing. While this topic would seem trivial at first glance, by the end of your lesson I gained a better understanding of tolerances and more. Thank you for your work.
What an absolutley fantastic video! The amazing animation, to the well spoken tone you have through the video makes this rather challenging topic easy to understand! Than you so much!
I thankfully was taught how to read drawings in my welding program, was way easier to comprehend after actually being taught, and made understanding the video much easier too
Fantastic video! I just finished the engineering drawing course and this video shows the basics in a more organized way that any professor here could. Great content keep it up!
These videos are captivating in every regard. I am amazed how educational videos can be this good. Really and honestly every video on this channel is above top tier.
I have been on the production floor than they pulled us into engineering offices to help engineering about better way to design from an installer or assembly point of view. So thanks for showing us the engineering language that we don't have all the glossary words to define thier pictographs.
This is fantastic! The animated version has been incredibly helpful in visualizing the concept. Thank you very much for your hard work! Recently, I joined a water consulting company where I needed to analyze and understand drawings. I appreciate your efforts and keep up the good work!
Should have saved a fortune doing engineering here than spending ridiculous money for college. God bless you. Our nerd engineer's community needs such youtubers.
Very good. Technical drawing is still important in 2024. MBD doesn't make it unnecessary. I am a CAD/CAM teacher and will advise this video to my students.
It makes me very happy that in my Engineering Design/ethics class, where they "teach" us about these drawings, I was taught nothing about engineering drawings beyond the first fifteen seconds of the video. Thanks, college!
All mechanical engineers have already covered this topic in college. We are now able to understand it because our brains are memorizing what we studied. This is a very basic but important syllabus that is only used in precise machining industries. GD&T is not applicable in construction industries as each industry uses its own standard. I learned GD&T 10 years ago, but I have never applied those rules.
It's important to remind there are different conventions regarding view projections, personally in my country the top view is on the bottom and right view sits on the left side due to the different projection system
I'm really disappointed in my collage right now. I had 5 months of engineering drawings (both theoretical and practical). And I learned less in 5 full months of classes than in 20 minutes of YT video. Great job.
Thanks for watching! And don't forget that the bonus video on model-based definition and statistical tolerance analysis is on Nebula - nebula.tv/videos/the-efficient-engineer-the-future-of-engineering-drawings.
Hello. The knowledge from your youtube channel is very useful. I think it needs to be spread to more people. I want to translate your video into Vietnamese and post it on my youtube channel. I will quote the source at your channel
i'm confused when you display the 6 total views at 3:59. shouldn't the right view have the sloping face on its left side? and the notches visible in the top/bottom and rear/front views should be mirrored to each other? when you deconstruct the 6 views from the cube shape, some of the views are flipped the wrong way, so we're seeing the image from behind, rather than how the camera saw it from the side it was taken. right?
@@sunfishMola Me, too. I think the BOTTOM VIEW, RIGHT VIEW, and REAR VIEW in the 3rd angle projection are incorrect.
Please check the BOTTOM VIEW, RIGHT VIEW, and REAR VIEW in 3rd angle projection at 4:00. I think that views are incorrect.
Hello there! I am a mechanical engineer, i work as a project engineer in HVAC industry. I have been watching your videos since you started making them. I am very frustrated on the fact that our teachers wasted so much of our time, energy and resources. I thank you for all your efforts, your videos are unparalleled, simple and detailed. More power to you. Keep up the good work!
Machinists: "don't show the engineers how to use GD&T!"
oh, so YOU'RE the reason why none of my parts fit.
@@theastuteangler I’m not a mechanic but always try to make an effort to make designs serviceable.
@@theastuteangler It never works though...
I really love this field of mechanical engineering, and I hope work as a mechanical engineer (Hvac designer), can you help me please to keep through this road? 🥺
As a technical drawing and CAD teacher I really admire your work. It is top notch job - absolutely profesional, detailed and what is the most important thing - easy to understand. I'm recomending your channel to all my students.
This comment section is full of smart people, working as engineer's, draftsman, and such, I personally, dont have a job, but want to become an aeronotical engineer someday, i really like how these videos explain it simply, and in great detail.
Good luck !
At this point every undergrad engineering course is making use of your videos as resources we have to study, and I am all for it. Hope you don’t mind unis using your material without your permission cause it’s so much beyond anything else that exists to explain these concepts in quality and clarity.
Thank you
Speaking as an MSc in Process Engineering, I have no idea why these stuff was never explained to us so well like it was here. I've spent 4.5 years in university to then find out I don't know anything and actually learn some fundamental engineering concepts from this channel. Thank you!
The older we become as engineers, the more we realize just how little we know...and just how INADEQUATE our learning in university was! BSME here.
Is this not taught in university I learnt it at my high school at 14 I thought this was common knowledge.
the greatest teacher is ALLAH, he guides us from the secrets of the universe to simple actions, which no school or university can teach you and our emotional perception is a miracle given by ALLAH
I am blown away by the quality to animation, thank you for putting so much hard work on this video.
I found myself not paying attention to the material and wondering how the heck those animations were done.
@@mikemazzantini6397 I was wondering the same thing.
Every mechanical undergrad will thank you. Great work.
I am studying mechanical engineering and I really love and appreciate your work (and art)! I often rewatch your videos to recall and internalize. Looking forward to further content! :)
fun fact: Russia has the greatest quantity of engineer graduates each year
@@yepi3345 ?
@@yepi3345 who cares
@@yepi3345 I'll also bet the US is far behind much of the world because of affirmative action programs. Even our high schools are failing because of teachers unions. This will eventually ruin our country.
This is a trip down memory lane for me.
I was an electro-mechanical designer for over 30 years in Silicon Valley from 1973 to 2008 creating drawings/designs from simple and highly complex circuit boards to creating machining drawings for high explosive outer shells for nuclear warheads to hard disc drives, to audio cassettes to RNA and DNA life science laboratory equipment. It's a wonderful career and no matter where you enter the industry I should think it quite rewarding. If you're new to this stay the course!!! And to the women out there have no doubts you can and will excel at this!!!
As an electrical engineer, I highly appreciate the high quality of your videos on mechanical engineering subjects, giving great insight to a person starting to learn about this.
There's so much high quality content on TH-cam for Math, Physics, Biology and Computer Science
About damn time engineering got some love. Thank you for your amazing work!
do you have specific channels in mind? I'd love some recommendations if you have any, thanks :)
@@dheomodi second that
@@dheomodi crash course . It’s the OG of TH-cam edutainment
@@dheomodi If you're asking for engineering related channels, there's Real Engineering, Stuff Made Here, BPS Space, Tech Ingredients, EEVBlog, ElectroBoom and a lot more I can't remember.
When it comes to Math, 3Blue1Brown and Numberphile are my go to, 3Blue1Brown had an event called "summer of math exposition" and the videos that came out of it are all amazing. For the other sciences, there are honestly so many high quality channels that I can't remember any off the top of my head.
True that. there is a lot of good quality content online. The good thing about engineering is that the principles are the same across the world even though local design codes can be different..
I blagged a job as a quality controller in an engineering company. One week left before my first day. My education starts here.
Wish me luck
This video is gold standard of explaining Engineering drawing
I am not an engineer or doing anything related to engineering drawing, I'm just a curious soul!... and i can tell that this is high quality content because you explained everything so eloquently that i even understood and followed along easily!... great stuff... I'm really sure people doing these things appreciate your content a lot!... big ups to you!
I'm now 77, and all my life I've been involved with engineering, drawings, and drafting. I ran a large drafting department for years. My High School Drafting Teacher told me I'd never make it working in engineering or let alone as a draftsman. My first job a draftsman! He told me that after I brought him a Drawing I made when I was ten years old, it looked exactly like these drawings. It was a detailed engineering drawing of a Spark Plug, an Aircraft Bracket, Moral here....If you have any fascination or feel like you'd want to draw like this..GO FOR IT..
im an mechnical engineer for a bus company in australia, this is the right way of interpreting the engineering drawings, we used third projections a lot in australia but you chosen the left view, i chose the right view as must display more solid lines instead of hidden lines, nice work!
This 20 minute video just taught me more than an entire semester of my engineering graphics class!
Definitely
absolutely 20 mins in 5 years in high school!
As a just recent graduate in Mech i found the videos you make as boon for those who wish to summarize, revise and also have intuitive fundamental knowledge of the concepts that they didnt had before!
I am an aspiring engineer who has always struggled with maintaining a college education, both financially and academically. I found your videos on Nebula and wanted to show you support here as well. Your lessons are clear, concise, and easy for me to follow. Thank you for making these.
I'm a person like you, I've seen something in the eyes of future engineers that they study engineering in any field for financial gain, and I don't think it's fair, after all, our profession is to fill the world with brilliance and innovation, isn't it
As a mechanical engineering student I've seen a lot of videos, books, lectures alongside my main courses in college, but your videos has always been the best and most informative. Thank you for teaching and inspiring!
Electrical engineer here. Brilliant animation, presentation, and pacing. Using this to teach other engineers.
Electrical engineer here.
Until recently, I spent most of my time at work electrically testing components against their wiring diagrams, which means looking up a ton of mechanical drawings in the process of trying to find electrical information.
It's wild to think of how much detail I missed or glossed over, day in and day out. Thanks for explaining!
I will strongly recommend that you should do a complete series of videos on engineering drawings. Topics like GD&T, tolerances, fits, etc. need a thorough explanation.
This is ESSENTIAL for draftsmen and engineers.
My college instructor told his classes: "Everyone starts out with an A. If I have to ask a question regarding your drawing, that's a B. Two questions is a C. Three questions is a D. Four questions is an F."
Dr. Crist
I agree
I wish I had these videos back in 2007 when I started the mechanical engineering course... a great resource for engineers for grasping the fundamentals.
Hi there. I'm an engineering student (shipbuilding & ocean engineering). I find that your videos are really good for learning and understanding. It's been really helpful. The animation and visualization on your videos are also amazing! I wish you all the best for life and I thank you for your contents.
What field of shipbuilding do you study
Damn man, you explained in 22 min the exact same things my Uni drawing lessons explaned in 3 months. AWESOME!
Hi there , I went through college for Tool & Die Design and went directly into the military gas turbine engine field where I was for 16 years . After which I worked for various aircraft and aerospace companies totaling 40 years in the industry . Blue print reading is fun and interesting and GD&T also . I still have my drawing board . I use it for a large computer table . Good luck to all in the future and take care .
This is my favorite part of enginering... Drawings. You can take earphones, play some bangers in it, "shut off" your brain and just draw. Ofcourse, its not a braindead activity, but at least for me, it is so relaxing and fun. Great video ;)
I am by no means an engineer, but rather an artist. This really helped me understand how to draw believable technical drawings and blueprints for sci-fi projects
As a manufacturing engineer, this video is so helpful. School doesn't teach you how to understand GD&t and engineering drawing skills which are essential to most mechanical and engineering jobs and usually you have to do training.
So true, right now I am lucky to be receiving training as a mechanical engineer.
I am an engineering student attending first grade of a higher techincal college in austria, and I loved the video. It was especially interesting to see the difference in the standards, and this was just so compact and informational.
Can't appreciate enough how elegantly the topic is explained. It is so soothing to watch the video. The animations are just perfect. Although the topic is too vast to be covered in a 22 min video, but still the basics are explained beautifully. Take a bow man....
As a design engineer I can tell you that this is one of the best videos that I have ever seen explaining an engineering drawing!
Just a quick note, as per ASME Y14.5 the symbol in 18:50 is called “Position” no “True position,” true position is the theoretical exact position aka the perfect position in the CAD, and the symbol is referring to the Geometric Characteristic of Position. This is a very common mistake in the engineering world
Just looking at that GD&T tol callout and the C datum seems redundant too. also the callout of 8 dia being +/- 0.2 when its already called in the callout on 0.2
It's refreshing for us engineers to witness the wonderful work you do on your videos. Thanks much, for providing us valuable contents.
This is the video I have always needed!!! As a Technology and Engineering teacher I appreciate you making this video. The explanations and visuals are awesome and are really going to help my students! Thanks!
This video cover up all of my 3 years engineering design & drawing flawlessly
This video made me realise that simply because someone is smart, doesn't mean they are a good teacher. I am incredibly thankful this channel exists to freely step in when the universtiy I am paying to go to is failing me.
You are the gold standard of educational TH-cam videos.
Na koniec mój "ulubiony" przedmiot. Czekanie do sesji nic nie da, jeden rysunek zajmuje jedną noc, a w semestrze było ich chyba 12. Literki duże mają mieć 7mm, małe 5mm, pomocnicze duże 5mm, małe 3,5mm, odmierz pół milimetra, kupiłem sobie szablony, dzisiaj już tego nie kupisz. Agnieszka nie ma złych uczniów, są źli nauczyciele. Ciebie wspominam dobrze, bardzo mnie motywujesz, no chcę się przed Tobą popisać.
Even as a mechanical engineer who is approaching the end of my career this was an excellent refresher video about engineering drawings
Clear and concise explanations with clean illustrations. Fantastic job. Thank you.
16:16 Tolerancing Best Practices
18:18 Geometric Dimensioning & Tolerancing
fun fact: Russia has the greatest quantity of engineer graduates each year
Millwright apprentice here, your video explained more than three of my drafting classes so far. Thank you
I really appreciate your content. I'm a recent mechanical engineering graduate and you break down challenging concepts very well
This channel is a goldmine for engineers
Dude.... It's absolutely frustrating that my college didn't do as good of a job at teaching me these applicable that these videos do. I've heard about most of this stuff and used it on my own but really felt like there were parts I didn't understand. These clear up a lot in a way I fully understand and I really really appreciate it. Thank you for bringing mechanical engineering into the 21st century
The Return of the King
I'm currently studying Computer Engineering and these drawings always amaze me. My father works as a mechanical engineer in the mining industry and I have seen some of the drawings on his computer. They are very complex for me to understand. Perhaps now I would have a better understanding haha.
I am so joyful to see you uploading content again! Thank you for your time and sharing your knowledge. Please keep it coming!
giving concept in such lucid way is simply incredible, please cover topics of fluid dynamics and IC engines
Even though I am an optical/electronics engineer, I enjoy your videos and find a lot of it useful. This drawing video was awesome. I learned drafting in middle school in 1977 and now use Solidworks a lot in my work.
You have no idea how useful this video is and the amount of time it could've saved for me
I'm a ITI student and this is recommended by TH-cam ...
Great 🎉🎉❤❤
A good visual analogy to help remember first and third angle projections is this: with first-angle, you rotate the object like it is on a hill; with third-angle, you rotate the object like it is in a bowl.
Edit: I work on sheet metal. So, it's awesome to see how standardized all this is. I'm going to show this video to new guys to get them caught up. You'd be surprised how little first and third angle projections are discussed in some shops. It can mean the difference between forming good parts and backwards ones....
Thanks for this amazing video, I started yesterday a course called Fundamentals of mechanical engineering where we will use Solidworks, so this video literally came at the best time
Thank you far making this video. You're helping the world learn a better way
PLEASE NEVER STOP. Youre saving mech engineers like me!
This 22 min is far beyond countless random courses and wasted hours in current education system.. kudos to you.
Wow, your illustrations are fascinating. I wish I had access to that kind of content back when I was graduating chemical engineering. I do share it with the freshmen so they can have a better time understanding the concepts.
👍🏻 The compact and absolut clear content of information including the art of presentation of this tutorial undoubtedly deserves a kind of "Oscar for teachers"! 🏆
I'm from Russia and studying engineering. It is interesting to see that drawings can be done a little differently. For example, 12:09 there are no such or similar designations in the ESKD standards. As a result, we indicate the dimensions of the "recesses" (or chamfers) with arrows. But we have pluses: we have any thread designated as in ISO (М30х3 or G12-½, Tr12x2,5...) and first view projection by default.
The person behind it is a true gem
One the Greatest Video about Engineering Drawing, For me I have learned as much i have learned in my initial 3 Months of Engineering Drawing Subject in my Diploma Engineering Course.
Loved it, Waiting for more if this ...!!! ❤
I just started machining parts as a hobby and I like to draw plans before making most of what I want. Its so rewarding to draw plans by hand and then make the parts afterwards.
Thanks to you my drawings are going to be much better now!
Cheers
Soy un estudiante de ingenieria Mecanica y de verdad te agradezco mucho el trabajo que haces.
This is a great video for all students and engineers to watch. Professors should show this video to their students when talking about how to create engineering drawings.
Fantastic video! This guy deserves an award for the best teacher!!! what a fabulous way of teaching!!! mind blowing super!!! well done. lots of love from Pakistan
Fantastic educational video. As a future mechanical engineering undergrad, thank you!
first time i see this channel, good job man , thank you for the hard work
This is a MASTERCLASS! This is now my goto reference video for my students.
I graduated months ago studying Petroleum Engineering. In my country, all Engineering courses take a minimum of 5yrs to complete. In level 2, all Engineering departments studied the same course so I did course both mechanical and civil engineering courses. we were mostly just lumped together and the course lecturer didn't really care since some of us "may not need it" apart from the Mechanical and civil engineering students. I had so source for videos online to understand the course and I'm gutted I just got to see this channel recommend by TH-cam 6months after graduation.
I do this daily just like that. But it took lot of efforts. This guy explained so well. Keep it up. 😀. If you are my teacher. I bow down and accept learn manythings.
This is amazing. While this topic would seem trivial at first glance, by the end of your lesson I gained a better understanding of tolerances and more. Thank you for your work.
Lovely video I would watch it again and again it's now my reference point , thank you
What an absolutley fantastic video! The amazing animation, to the well spoken tone you have through the video makes this rather challenging topic easy to understand! Than you so much!
Do you have any idea about the used software in this video ?
@@hannibalbarca8411 Unfortunantley i don't, sorry!
really good, as a design engineer, its a total explanation for everyday work
I have been dethroned as the best mechanical drawing video on youtube. Please take this trophy
Haha you're too kind. Your video is great. We can share!
Outstanding. Forwarding to my former solidworks drawing and gd&t teacher. Glad to be a patreon.
One of the videos that engineering students should definitely watch!
I thankfully was taught how to read drawings in my welding program, was way easier to comprehend after actually being taught, and made understanding the video much easier too
Fantastic video! I just finished the engineering drawing course and this video shows the basics in a more organized way that any professor here could. Great content keep it up!
These videos are captivating in every regard. I am amazed how educational videos can be this good. Really and honestly every video on this channel is above top tier.
I have been on the production floor than they pulled us into engineering offices to help engineering about better way to design from an installer or assembly point of view. So thanks for showing us the engineering language that we don't have all the glossary words to define thier pictographs.
This is fantastic! The animated version has been incredibly helpful in visualizing the concept. Thank you very much for your hard work! Recently, I joined a water consulting company where I needed to analyze and understand drawings. I appreciate your efforts and keep up the good work!
Thank to this video I will pass my mechanical design class. This is amazing, thank you!
Should have saved a fortune doing engineering here than spending ridiculous money for college. God bless you. Our nerd engineer's community needs such youtubers.
You earned a follower. This is a very good video. As an electrical engineer this explained a lot to me.
This is a great video for beginners. Thank you for providing such a high quality on TH-cam on engineering drawings.
This single video cover whole my first semester good job dude
Love these videos. I'm a software engineer, but I actually apply some of these practices to my designs
Very good. Technical drawing is still important in 2024. MBD doesn't make it unnecessary. I am a CAD/CAM teacher and will advise this video to my students.
It makes me very happy that in my Engineering Design/ethics class, where they "teach" us about these drawings, I was taught nothing about engineering drawings beyond the first fifteen seconds of the video.
Thanks, college!
Wonderful illustrations of concepts that are often overlooked in the typical engineering degree program. Thank you for sharing to the world!
All mechanical engineers have already covered this topic in college. We are now able to understand it because our brains are memorizing what we studied. This is a very basic but important syllabus that is only used in precise machining industries. GD&T is not applicable in construction industries as each industry uses its own standard. I learned GD&T 10 years ago, but I have never applied those rules.
It's important to remind there are different conventions regarding view projections, personally in my country the top view is on the bottom and right view sits on the left side due to the different projection system
I'm really disappointed in my collage right now. I had 5 months of engineering drawings (both theoretical and practical). And I learned less in 5 full months of classes than in 20 minutes of YT video. Great job.
excellent video keep it up and make it more informative and quality and easy explanation
Just discovered this creator. Will be using these videos to help train employees on drawings.
I just worked in METAL CNC IN SAIGON- it’s so useful . Thank you
Very useful information and your way of explanation is really commendable. Would like to watch more of your videos on GD&T content very soon.