ANSI/ASME Y14.1

American standard for paper sizes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In 1992, the American National Standards Institute adopted ANSI/ASME Y14.1 Decimal Inch Drawing Sheet Size and Format,[1] which defined a regular series of paper sizes based upon the de facto standard 8+12 in × 11 in "letter" size to which it assigned the designation "ANSI A". This series also includes "ledger"/"tabloid" as "ANSI B". This series is somewhat similar to the ISO 216 standard in that cutting a sheet in half would produce two sheets of the next smaller size. Unlike the ISO standard, however, the arbitrary aspect ratio forces this series to have two alternating aspect ratios.

A size chart illustrating the ANSI sizes

ANSI/ASME Y14.1 has been revised or updated in 1995, 2005, 2012 and 2022. It had an accompanying standard, ANSI/ASME Y14.1M, that defined metric drawing paper sizes based upon ISO 216 and ISO 5457.[2] ASME Y14.1 and ASME Y14.1M have now been revised and consolidated into one document, ASME Y14.1-2020, Drawing Sheet Size and Format, published on 18 December 2020.[3]

With care, documents can be prepared so that the text and images fit on either ANSI or their equivalent ISO sheets at 1:1 reproduction scale.[importance?]

More information Name, in × in ...
ANSI/ASME Y14.1 inch-based drawing paper sizes
Name in × inmm × mmRatioAliasSimilar ISO A size
ANSI A 8+12 × 11216 × 2792217 = 1.2941LetterA4
ANSI B 17 × 11
11 × 17
432 × 279
279 × 432
1711 = 1.5455Ledger[4]
Tabloid
A3
ANSI C 17 × 22432 × 5592217 = 1.2941A2
ANSI D 22 × 34559 × 8641711 = 1.5455A1
ANSI E 34 × 44864 × 11182217 = 1.2941A0
ANSI F 28 × 40711 × 1016107 = 1.4286A0
ANSI G 11 × 22.5–90279 × 572–2286N/a
ANSI H 28 × 44–143711 × 1118–3632N/a
ANSI J 34 × 55–176864 × 1397–4470N/a
ANSI K 40 × 55–1431016 × 1397–3632N/a
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Size F does not continue the alphabetic series, because it does not exhibit the same aspect ratios.

Sizes G, H, J and K are roll formats. G size is 11 in (279.4 mm) high, but variable width up to 90 in (2286 mm) in increments of 8+12 in. Such sheets were at one time used for full-scale layouts of aircraft parts, wiring harnesses and the like, but today are generally not needed, due to widespread use of computer-aided design (CAD) and computer-aided manufacturing (CAM).

More information Name, mm × mm ...
ANSI/ASME Y14.1M metric drawing paper sizes
Name mm × mmRatio
A0 841 × 11892:1
A1 594 × 8412:1
A2 420 × 5942:1
A3 297 × 4202:1
A4 210 × 2972:1
A1.0 594 × 11892:1
A2.1 420 × 8412:1
A2.0 420 × 118922:1
A3.2 297 × 5942:1
A3.1 297 × 84122:1
A3.0 297 × 11894:1
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See also

References

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