Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Whereas the Parliament of India has set out to provide a practical regime of right to
information for citizens to secure access to information under the control of public authorities,
in order to promote transparency and accountability in the working of every public authority,
and whereas the attached publication of the Bureau of Indian Standards is of particular interest
to the public, particularly disadvantaged communities and those engaged in the pursuit of
education and knowledge, the attached public safety standard is made available to promote the
timely dissemination of this information in an accurate manner to the public.
1 +, 1 +
01 ' 5
Jawaharlal Nehru
IS/ISO 13715 (1994): Technical Drawings - Corners Vocabulary and Indication on Drawings [PGD 24: Drawings]
! $ ' +-
Satyanarayan Gangaram Pitroda
! > 0 B
BharthariNtiatakam
Indian Standard
TECHNICAL DRAWINGS CORNERS
VOCABULARY AND INDICATION ON DRAWINGS
!CS 01.100
BIS 1996
Price Group 7
NATIONAL FOREWORD
This Indian Standard which is identical with ISO 13715 : 1994 'Technical drawings Corners
Vocabulary and indication on drawings', issued by the International Organization for Standardization
(ISO), was adopted by the Bureau of Indian Standards on the recommendation of the Drawings Sectional Committee and approval by the Light Mechanical Engineering Division Council.
In the adopted standard, certain terminology and conventions are not identical with those used in Indian
Standards; attention is particularly drawn to the following:
a) Comma (,) has been used as a decimal marker while in Indian Standards the current
practice is to use a point (.) as the decimal marker.
b) Wherever the words 'International Standard' appear referring to this standard, they should
be read as Indian Standard'.
In this adopted standard, reference appears to certain International Standards for which Indian Standards also exists. The corresponding Indian Standards which are to be substituted in their place are
listed below along with their degree of equivalence for the editions indicated:
International Standard
Degree of
Equivalence
ISO 128:1982
Identical
Identical
The concerned technical committee has reviewed the provisions of ISO 3461-2 :1987 referred in this
adopted standard and has decided that the same is acceptable for use in conjunction with this standard.
Indian Standard
TECHNICAL DRAWINGS CORNERS
VOCABULARY AND INDICATION ON DRAWINGS
1 Scope
This International Standard defines terms relating to
states of corners and specifies rules for the non-verbai
indication of states of corners of undefined shape on
technical drawings.
It also specifies the proportions and dimensions of the
graphical symbols used for this indication.
When a special shape of corners is required, the
general dimensioning principles given in ISO 129 apply.
2 Normative references
The following standards contain provisions which,
through reference in this text, constitute provisions of
this International Standard. At the time of publication,
the editions indicated were valid. All standards are
subject to revision, and parties to agreements based
on this International Standard are encouraged to
investigate the possibility of applying the most recent
editions of the standards indicated below. Members of
IEC and ISO maintain registers of currently valid
International Standards.
ISO 128:1982, Technical drawings General principles of presentation.
ISO 129:1985, Technical drawings Dimensioning
General principles, definitions, methods of execution and special indications.
ISO 3461-2:1987, General principles for the creation
of graphical symbols Part 2: Graphical symbols for
use in technical product documentation.
1
Definitions
Sharp corner.
Remaining burr
Figure 1
Sharp corner
Sharp corner
Undercut (rounded)
Undercut (chamfered)
Figure 2
Figure 8
Figure 5
Figure 9
Figure 6
Figure 10
Figure 7
Figure 11
4
Figure 15
Figure 12
Figure 16
Figure 13
4 Indications on the drawing
4.1
Figure 14
Figure 17
IS/ISO 13715:1994
4,2
Basic symbol
Figure 19
a)
b)
Figure 18
Figure 20
4.3
Table 1
Interpretation
Symbol
element
External corner
Internal corner
burr permitted
passing permitted
undercut permitted;
burr not permitted
undercut permitted;
passing not permitted
Figure 22
Figure 23
a and/or b
Application
1)
+ 2,5
+1
+ 0,5
+ 0.3
+ 0,1
+ 0,05
+ 0,02
Sharp corner
-0,02
-0,05
-0,3
-0,5
permitted
-2,5
Figure 27
In conformity with ISO 129, the graphical symbol as
well as the inscriptions shall be oriented so that they
may be read from the bottom or the right-hand side
of the drawing.1'
4.5.2 States of corners which are valid only for a
prescribed length shall be represented by a corresponding size indication and by a chain thick line (see
ISO 128, line type J) (see figure 29).
Figure 28
Figure 29
Figure 30
1) In figures 27 to 29 the position of the inscription is only an example; the indication of dimension has been suggested by
three dots.
8
Figure 34
Examples
Table 3
10
11
12
Annex A
(normative)
Proportions and dimensions of graphical symbols
A.1
General requirement
In order to harmonize the size of the graphical symbols specified in this International Standard with the
sizes of other indications on the drawing (dimensions,
tolerances, etc.) the rules given in ISO 3461-2 shall be
observed.
A.2 Proportions
The graphical symbols and the additional indications
in the areas a 1 to 83 shall be draughted in accordance
with figure A. T.
Figure A.1
A.3
Dimensions
Lettering height, h
The dimensional requirements of the graphical symbols and the additional indications are specified in table A.1.
13
3.5
10
14
0,35
0,5
0,7
1.4
Date of Issue
BUREAU OF INDIAN
Text Affected
STANDARDS