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THINK – checking CAD linework
Posted by Unknown Member on July 14, 2020 at 1:20 amWhich glass will fill up first?
Unknown Member replied 3 years, 8 months ago 13 Members · 28 Replies- 28 Replies
Only one will ever fill.
Only 2 will ever fill. Nothing will reach 1, 3, or 4. Checking CAD linework.
@norman-oklahoma
Not number 2. Look closer.
It depends, of course, on whether you intend to keep filling the top reservoir. Then only one glass will ever get a drop. Number three gets my vote.
Historic Boundaries and Conservation EffortsIt’s impossible to answer, because FL/GA has neglected to post a link to the 700 page design rule manual. Considering the inconsistency in how ends of channels are represented, it’s probable that design rule violations exist and the drawing will be rejected.
Presuming the drawing is indeed rejected, it will never be sent to the fabrication shop and none of the glasses will ever fill up.
ok, which one!
First I need to know if the drawing complies with the National CAD standards.
The colors aren’t nearly hard enough to see which leads me to think it’s all drawn on the 0 layer, oh the humanity.
So far only one answer is ??almost? correct without further clarification.
Re-read the title caption!
- Posted by: @not-my-real-name
It depends, of course, on whether you intend to keep filling the top reservoir.
Assume you are.
Well, 1 and 4 can’t fill because their inlets are blocked. Folks who answered either of those should never work on sewer projects.
- Posted by: @dave-karoly
First I need to know if the drawing complies with the National CAD standards.
The colors aren’t nearly hard enough to see which leads me to think it’s all drawn on the 0 layer, oh the humanity.
Yes Dave, the dwg is in accordance with National CAD standard as well as the NCEE, NCES, NASA, ASTM, OSHA, CBS, NBC, CNN, and the California Cupcake Association.
????
1, 2, & 4 are all blocked
Look closely at the line work. #1, #2, and #4 will not receive any because their tubes are closed.
.JPH got it first w/B93 following. ????
None at my house, we drink straight out of the barrel.
Your drawing cuts off the source of the wine, so how do I compute the hydraulically head? I’m also gong to need the roughness coefficient of the piping.
@flga
This thread had only been up for six minutes when I gave my first reply. I didn’t wish to spoil the fun for the many who would follow. It is clearly only glass number three that will ever receive liquid. Saw right off that one and four were blocked. Took a bit to see the blockage of number two. Tried to come up with some excuse that number three would not fill using the assumption the true answer was supposed to be none of them. Gave up and went with three. Just kept my yapper shut for a change.
@flga
Look again at a middle of the night answer. I didn’t tell.
If this had been a question put to engineers then the hydraulics of the arrangement would have been pertinent. Only a couple of states expect a surveyor to have any grasp of such things and no states expect such education for draftsmen/draftswomen/draftspeople/drafters/whatever floats your boat.
We are guessing at the liquid and its characteristics. It is possible that flow would not occur based on those characteristics.
Ah. I see it now. I fell in the trap of finding one error and thinking I was done.
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