I am working on piping drawings and need to create a large arrow outline with a white fill to place on top of the piping geometry to indicate flow directions. My problem is that no matter what settings I change a solid hatch with color 255 will not plot correctly, it is either not plotting or plotting transparent. As I need transparency in the other parts of the drawing unchecking the plot transparency box is not an option. Likewise I've tried adjusting the screening value in my ctb but it will not plot regardless of the setting. Does anyone know how I can achieve what I need and why something that should be simple is this overcomplicated?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by maxwatson91. Go to Solution.
Hello. A couple of questions for you.
If you can provide a drawing sample of this, that would help, not just me, but for any others that may want to chime in. Thanks.
I appreciate you guys responding. I've discovered a solution through some trial and error and believe I know what was happening but still am not sure why. To answer your questions I did attempt multiple close colors including 254 and close variations of 255,254,254 with no luck. When I tried any other color not on the grayscale it appears but with transparency. I triple checked all my layer settings and did not find an issue. Finally I had the thought to try layering a wipeout underneath the arrow and have found success. It appears that the hatch in my paper space was adapting the same transparency as some of the geometry in my model space that it was on top of in my viewport though I don't know why or how that would happen. Thank you for trying to assist.
You've got to learn to live with and use some of the "features" that AutoCAD provides us. Long before there was Wipeout, I used my own Whiteout with color 255. I always preached to plot with "lines overwrite" turned on, so that you could treat your drawing like a ham and cheese sandwich... if the cheese is on top of the ham then the ham is hidden by the cheese. But if you put the mustard on top of the cheese, then you can see it. If you don't like seeing your mustard then put it under the cheese. Draworder was a tremendous feature they added.
John F. Uhden
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