5 Tee on a Taper

 

 

  1. Draw a full elevation view of the fitting

 

 

  1. Add a profile to the tee and extend element lines into the taper. Extend the outside element lines (1 and 7) to the center of the taper. These will create 2 baselines for further development

 

 

  1. Where the outsides of the tee contacts the taper (points 1 and 7), swing arcs equal to the tapers radius at those points, using the center of the taper as the radius point

 

 

  1. From the same 2 points (1 and 7), create a half profile (90° quadrant) of the tee. This quarter circle will be on the same baseline (element lines 1 and 7) as the arcs swung in step 3

 

  1. Divide the half profiles into 3 equal parts

 

 

  1. From both points 1 and 7, extend element lines horizontally from the 3 divisions, into the arc of the taper and where they contact, project the vertically into the baselines

 

 

  1. Where these 3 element lines contact the baselines, connect them from 1 to 7. The outsides get connected, the middles gets connected and the insides get connected to create 3 new element lines on the taper. This gives us a correct view of the tapers shape

 

 

  1. Create the miter line of the tee by finding the cross points of the element lines from the tee and the taper. The standard over 1 down 1 pattern seen in parallel line stays true here.

 

 

  1. Draw the stretch-out of the tee and divide into 12 equal spaces

 

 

  1. Starting from the seam location, transfer the element lines from the tee into the corresponding stretch-out locations

 

 

  1. Use a flexible curve to draw in the miter line of the pattern

License

Pattern Development: Sheet Metal Level 3 Copyright © by bcoey. All Rights Reserved.

Share This Book