cdrvice,
None of the ASME standards I have here show shaded views. That does not necessarily make them non-compliant.
When you communicate with people through computers, assume the lowest common denominator in technology. This is critical if you communicate outside your organisation, and it is especially critical if you communicate with people at home.
Assume your recipient has a crappy old black and white ink-jet printer that does letter sized prints only. I do not think there is any such thing as a crappy old ink-jet printer that does letter sized only, but crappy exists, old exists, black and white exists, ink jet exists, and letter size only exists.
They might try to do photo-copying. Shaded prints deteriorate in quality as they are copied and re-copied. Photo-copying is getting less and less popular, but it might not be less popular enough. You probably are safe from fax machines.
Do not assume your recipient has a good, high resolution monitor. Test your graphics on a cheap laptop with a 1366[×]768[ ]display.
Do not assume your recipient is able, willing, and/or allowed to install viewing software like SolidWorks' Edwg viewer. Do not assume that your executable viewing file will make it past the other guy's spam filter and security. My understanding is that some corporate filters remove office documents if they contain scripting.
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JHG