YOUR EQUIPMENT AND MATERIALS
Selection of drafting equipment and materials
will depend largely upon each of your drafting
assignments. Let your good judgment and
common sense guide you in their selection. After
some experience, you will automatically select
proper equipment and materials as they are
required. Until you become proficient, dont
hesitate to seek the advice of your drafting
supervisor or an experienced draftsman. Assign-
ments to staff and support billets within the Naval
Construction Force (NCF) will expose you to
modern drafting equipment and materials, such
as the adjustable drafting board with a drafting
machine attached.
Drafting Board
As a SEABEE draftsman, you will probably
not be able to select your drafting board. Unless
the board is new, it will probably be marred
and full of small pinholes. To obtain a smooth
drawing surface, you should cover the board with
a vinyl material or heavy manila paper. Laminated
vinyl covering minimizes pencil scoring, is non-
glaring, and is easily kept clean by wiping with
a damp cloth. Heavy manila paper will serve the
same purpose, but must be replaced when it
becomes soiled or marked with use.
Drafting Paper
Most of the drawings that you will prepare will
be drawn on tracing paper, which was described
in chapter 2. You will use tracing paper to copy
or trace drawings either in pencil or in ink. You
will also prepare most of your original pencil
drawings on tracing paper. This type of paper is
especially suited for reproduction of blueprints.
However, it tears easily and becomes soiled after
repeated handling.
When making a drawing directly on tracing
paper, you should place a smooth sheet of white
paper below it (detail paper works well). The
whiteness of this sheet (called a platen sheet) gives
better line visibility, and its hard surface makes
it possible to draw good pencil lines without
grooving the tracing paper.
Do not usc gritty erasers on tracing paper,
especially when ink is to be applied. If erasures
must be made, use a green or red ruby eraser,
which is only slightly abrasive. Abrasive erasers
wear away the surface. Erase carefully so you
dont tear the drawing. A light back-and-forth
motion works best. If the surface of the drawing
becomes scratched by erasing, it can be partially
smoothed by burnishing the damaged area with
a hard, smooth object or your thumbnail. Avoid
using the electric eraser on tracing paper, as it will
quickly burn a hole through the paper. To
clean up smudges and dust, use a soft art gum
eraser or sprinkle pounce on the drawing and rub
lightly with your hand or a triangle.
Water, perspiration, or graphite from your
pencil will ruin drawing paper. In order to keep
moist hands or arms from marring the drawing,
use a clean sheet of paper as a mask to protect
the drawing surface next to the work area.
Between drawing sessions you should protect
unfinished drawings by covering them.
Tracing paper must not be folded. The crease
marks will damage the lines on the drawing and
cause blurred prints when the drawing is
reproduced. For that matter, no drawing should
ever be folded. Drawings and tracings should be
either stored flat or rolled and placed in cylindrical
containers. Prints or drawings larger than 8 1/2
in. by 11 in. may be folded so that they can be
filed in standard filing cabinets.
Besides tracing paper, you will select other
types of paper for special uses. You will be mainly
concerned with the gridded papers described in
chapter 2. The quality of the gridded paper that
you will use is similar to that of tracing paper and
should be used in the same manner.
As you gain experience, you will learn which
type of paper to use for each drafting assignment.
Of course, you will be limited by the types of
paper available and the guidelines given to you
by your drafting supervisor.
Drafting Pencils
For the average drafting assignment, three or
four pencils are usually sufficient. A hard
pencil, 4H or 5H, should be used to lay out the
drawing in light construction and projection lines.
A medium pencil, H or F, is then used to darken
the required lines and to make arrowheads and
lettering. The grade of drawing paper you use will
also determine which pencil you choose for
making a drawing. A soft, rough-textured paper
usually requires a softer pencil for layout work,
since a hard pencil would leave indentations in
the paper and thus spoil the appearance of the
drawing.
One way to find out if you are using the
proper pencils on a drawing is to make a blueprint
(reproduction) of the drawing. If the reproduced
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