Analysis: pass a series of cutting planes through the apex of the cone and parallel to the axis of the cylinder, cutting elements from both surfaces. Descriptive Geometry - Page 225by Lawrence Edminster Cutter - 1923 - 244 pagesFull view - About this book
| John S. Rooke - Mechanical drawing - 1902 - 96 pages
...straight lines. Draw lines as shown in the side elevation, which will be the traces of planes passing through the apex of the cone and parallel to the axis of the cylinder. Be sure to draw a" b and a" a"1 tangent to the cylinder. When the axes of the solids intersect —... | |
| Gardner Chace Anthony, George Francis Ashley - Geometry, Descriptive - 1909 - 196 pages
...being common to both surfaces, and therefore a point in the required curve. METHOD. 1. Draw a line through the apex of the cone and parallel to the axis of the cylinder. 2. Determine its trace in the plane of the bases of the cylinder and cone. 3. Through this trace draw... | |
| Gardner Chace Anthony, George Francis Ashley - Geometry, Descriptive - 1909 - 194 pages
...Case 1. Cylinder and cone with axes oblique to the coordinate plane : Use auxiliary planes containing the apex of the cone and parallel to the axis of the cylinder. Case 2. Two cylinders with axes oblique to the coordinate plane : Use auxiliary planes parallel to... | |
| William Griswold Smith - Geometry, Descriptive - 1925 - 306 pages
...the case of a cone intersecting a cylinder, then, a natural procedure would be to pass a series of planes through the apex of the cone and parallel to the axis of the cylinder. This is one example. The accompanying table may be of use in deciding what sort of plane to use in... | |
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