vonsteimel
Mechanical
- Oct 19, 2010
- 132
Greetings,
This is more of a drafting question I suppose, but it fits the electrical bill.
Has anyone seen, know, or have any examples of a detail drawing of a complex electrical harness. In particular one with multiple layers of heat-shrink (or similair) sealing various soldered connections layered over one another?
Just curious as to how others have handled the situation on a drawing. Where you have individual splices that are heat-shrinked, that are then bundled into groups that are heat-shrinked over the top of that, which is then heatshrinked into bigger bundles, that is then all heatshrinked together (in that particular area) and is then covered with a braided loom (in that particular area)....
If that makes any sense...
Not really looking to get into why one would do such a thing, or alternative to heat-shrinking all that, but merely how to sufficiently detail the situation on a drawing when it is encountered.
As of right now, it seems easiest to do it with more of a work instruction, nevertheless there will need to be an end-result [detail] drawing of what is produced.
Thanks,
VS
This is more of a drafting question I suppose, but it fits the electrical bill.
Has anyone seen, know, or have any examples of a detail drawing of a complex electrical harness. In particular one with multiple layers of heat-shrink (or similair) sealing various soldered connections layered over one another?
Just curious as to how others have handled the situation on a drawing. Where you have individual splices that are heat-shrinked, that are then bundled into groups that are heat-shrinked over the top of that, which is then heatshrinked into bigger bundles, that is then all heatshrinked together (in that particular area) and is then covered with a braided loom (in that particular area)....
If that makes any sense...
Not really looking to get into why one would do such a thing, or alternative to heat-shrinking all that, but merely how to sufficiently detail the situation on a drawing when it is encountered.
As of right now, it seems easiest to do it with more of a work instruction, nevertheless there will need to be an end-result [detail] drawing of what is produced.
Thanks,
VS