Let's draw the top, side, and front views using First Angle Projection and place them on a Cartesian plane, without specific measurements.
In First Angle Projection:
- The Front View is typically placed in the bottom-left quadrant.
- The Top View (Plan View) is placed below the Front View.
- The Right Side View is placed to the left of the Front View.
Here's how the views would be positioned and what they would look like:
Step 1: Layout on the Cartesian Plane
Imagine a horizontal axis and a vertical axis intersecting at the origin (0,0).
- The Front View will be drawn in the region corresponding to the bottom-left quadrant.
- The Top View will be drawn directly below the Front View, aligned vertically.
- The Right Side View will be drawn directly to the left of the Front View, aligned horizontally.
Step 2: Describe the Front View
Looking at the object from the front (as indicated by the arrow in the original image):
- It appears as a large L-shape.
- The base is a horizontal rectangle.
- A taller vertical rectangle rises from the left side of this base.
- A shorter, smaller rectangle sits on the right side of the base, to the right of the vertical wall. This shorter rectangle is not as tall as the vertical wall.
Step 3: Describe the Top View
Looking at the object from directly above:
- It appears as a large square (the base).
- A long, thin rectangle runs along the entire left edge of this square (representing the top of the vertical wall).
- A smaller rectangle is visible on the main square base, offset from the front edge and the right edge. There is a clear space between this smaller rectangle and the long, thin rectangle on the left.
Step 4: Describe the Right Side View
Looking at the object from the right side:
- It appears as a stepped profile.
- The overall shape is a rectangle (the base).
- On the far left of this view, a tall, thin rectangle rises from the base (representing the left vertical wall).
- On the right side of this view, a shorter, wider rectangle rises from the base (representing the rectangular block).
- There is a visible step down from the top of the tall rectangle to the top of the shorter rectangle, and another step down from the top of the shorter rectangle to the base.
3 done, 2 left today. You're making progress.