It's important to understand who will be using the drawing, and for what purpose. Does it merely identify the system components for inspection or customer acceptance? Or does it perform another function related to transportation, installation or proper connections? Each drawing type has a particular audience and/or set of applicable business rules (if not, then there's no purpose in distinguishing one drawing type from another).
Depending on your goal, you may want to consider these as candidates:
Assembly drawing: Depicts the assembled relationship of (a) two or more parts, (b) a combination of parts and subordinate assemblies, or (c) a group of assemblies required to form an assembly of higher order. It shall contain sufficient views to show the relationship between each subordinate assembly and parts in the assembly
depicted.
Arrangement drawing: Depicts in any projection or perspective drawing technique, with or without controlling dimensions, the relationship of major units of the item depicted.
Installation drawing: Shows the installed and assembled position of an item(s) relative to its supporting structure or to associated items.
Combination of adopted items drawing: Depicts the items constituting a combination of items and assigns a unique identification number to the combination. The drawing serves as the basic document for assignment of a stock number to the combination.
Package content drawing: Provides package part number and appropriate pack nomenclature for stock identification
of material packaged for convenience of handling, storage, issue, or functional selectivity in logistic support operations. Package content drawings are prepared for that packaging which constitutes a synthetic grouping or combination of items, which in themselves do not constitute a functioning, engineering, or production assembly.
Interface control drawing: Depicts physical and functional interface engineering requirements of an item which affect the design or operation of co-functioning Items. These drawings are used as design control documents, delineating interface engineering data coordinated for purpose of: (a) establishing and maintaining compatibility between co-functioning items; (b) controlling interface designs thereby preventing changes to each item’s requirements which would affect compatibility with co-functioning sub-systems; (c) communicating design decisions and changes to participating activities.
Transportability drawing: Contains data that will assist in preparing an item or major system for shipment.
For each drawing type's requirements, see ASME Y14.24 or MIL-STD-100.
- Ed