I was taught in Drafting school that when the centerline symbol is used, it should always be overlapping the centerline it belongs to. Some engineers and other types of CAD jockeys (who never learned drafting formally) cringe at this thought for some reason and I've never been able to figure out why. In my experience, any old examples (board drawings and older ACAD drawings) always have overlapping the centerline.
OK, now to the next topic. The CL is no longer a standard symbol. It's not disallowed by the standards, but it is also not supported by the standards. If you intend to use the CL symbol (or any symbol not supported by the standards) at your company, a definition should be stated somewhere that everyone can find. At my last company, we defined all special symbols in the general notes when they appeared on the drawing.
Is CL needed? Sometimes, it helps, but it is never really needed. Why does it sometimes help? Because you may have a drawing view with many centerlines (through various features that lend themselves to the use of centerlines), and you may wish to identify the centerline that represents the center of the part itself. You can use CL to do that.
Finally, your drawing looks like a SolidWorks drawing. (It doesn't matter if it is not...I'm just going to use SolidWorks as the example.) For horizontal lines, just use the CL as is. But for vertical lines, you may wish to rotate the CL about -20degs (an option available in the PropertyManager for the annotation note). This will avoid having the vertical line in the L disappearing on the centerline.
Matt Lorono, CSWP
Product Definition Specialist,
DS SolidWorks Corp
Personal sites:
Lorono's SolidWorks Resources &
SolidWorks Legion