Blueprint Scale Drawing |
As so often happened at eHow, Steph simply chose to interpret the query for easy cribbing. In this case, she decided that all the OQ wanted to know was how to scale down a drawing. To that end, she did a fair job with instructions calculating a scale factor (how hard could it be, after all?), although she's not too sharp if she thinks the longest dimension of a building would be thirty feet or that someone would be drawing house plans on a sheet of paper ten inches long.
Be that as it may, Sundberg had a little problem with the topic, informing her readers that"Building plans aren't drawn to size, they are drawn to scale, which means that you 'shrink' the area down and make a scale model on paper..."...a typical eHow sloppy description. First, you don't make a "scale model on paper," since a model is a three-dimensional object and paper is two-dimensional. You make a scale drawing. Second, you don't "shrink the area," you shrink the dimensions – or to be more accurate, you apply a constant scale factor, a divisor, to each measurement. And, of course, it's impossible to perform Sundberg's first instruction, |
"Measure the longest part of your building project, in feet..."...unless you have a time machine: you can't measure what doesn't yet exist!
The most useless aspect of Steph's post, however, is that she simply left everything hanging after explaining a rudimentary scale factor calculation (three feet per inch, by the way, is not particularly common). Apparently she thought she was done, even though the question specifically asks about area, which she only mentioned in passing in her introduction. Not only does she do nothing to help the OQ determine area, she does as little as possible to help him actually create a scale drawing.
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