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Engineering drawing
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==Abbreviations and symbols== {{main|Engineering drawing abbreviations and symbols}} As in many technical fields, a wide array of abbreviations and symbols have been developed in engineering drawing during the 20th and 21st centuries. For example, [[cold rolled steel]] is often abbreviated as CRS, and [[diameter]] is often abbreviated as [[Engineering drawing abbreviations and symbols|DIA, D, or ⌀]]. Most engineering drawings are language-independent—words are confined to the title block; symbols are used in place of words elsewhere.<ref> Brian Griffiths. [https://books.google.com/books?id=eZkRaV9wyHMC&pg=PA13 "Engineering Drawing for Manufacture"]. 2002. p. 1 and p. 13. </ref> With the advent of computer generated drawings for manufacturing and machining, many symbols have fallen out of common use. This poses a problem when attempting to interpret an older hand-drawn document that contains obscure elements that cannot be readily referenced in standard teaching text or control documents such as ASME and ANSI standards. For example, ASME Y14.5M 1994 excludes a few elements that convey critical information as contained in older US Navy drawings and aircraft manufacturing drawings of World War 2 vintage. Researching the intent and meaning of some symbols can prove difficult.
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