Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Lesser Known AutoCAD Gems: Creating Metric Drawing Sheets with Imperial Page Sizes

Creating Metric Drawing Sheets with Imperial Page Sizes


Although imperial measurements remain the prevalent standard in the U.S., a growing number of projects are indeed utilizing metric measurements. This combination of both imperial and metric measurements creates a unique challenge for many architects and engineers. After all we’re taught paper space (layouts) should always be 1:1, yet using a standard imperial paper size like Arch D (24 in x 36 in) will yield a layout of about 0.94 x 1.41 units – not the intended result.
So the question remains, how do you plot a metric drawing using a standard imperial paper size such as Arch D (24 in x 36 in)?
  1. Open the Page Setup Manager; right-click on layout tab, Application Menu > Print > Page Setup.
  2. Create a new named page setup by clicking New.
  3. Give your page setup a name and click OK. In this example I’ll use Arch D Metric
    NewPageSetup
  4. Configure the Page Setup dialog just as you would for a “normal” imperial plot.
    Select plotter, paper size, etc.
    SelectPlotterPaper
  5. Within the Plot Scale portion of the Page Setup dialog, click the drop-down list that currently reads inches, and click mm.
    ChooseUnits
  6. Verify the Plot Scale is 1:1, and the preview updates to display the dimensions of the selected paper size in millimeters not inches (914 mm x 610 mm in the example of an Arch D 36 in x 24 in drawing sheet). Click OK to save the page setup.
    FinalPageSetup
The most important part to the above process is changing from inches to mm within the Plot Scale portion of the dialog. Doing this will make it so you can plot to a 24 in x 36 in piece of paper, but more importantly – select actual Metric scales for your viewports.

Wednesday, February 22, 2012

Words to ponder on!




There is no time for cut-and-dried monotony.
There is time for work.
And time for love.
That leaves no other time! - Coco Chanel


Tuesday, February 21, 2012

Monday, February 20, 2012

What Google knows about you

From your searches and most visited sites 
Google creates a composite of you.


Find out what Google thinks of you HERE.


As an experiment. Rate its correctness on a scale of 1-10 and put your score in the comment box.

Lesser known Autocad 2012 gems: Drag and move with keyboard

Select an object...
Note: Avoid keeping the cursor on any grip
Now hold down the control key and using the cursor keys on the keyboard move the object around.