Hello
I have done my model in 1:1 in meters
But I want to print it out on an A4 with the scale 1:200 in meters.
When I try to put my scale to 1 mm = 200 units in page setup my model comes out very tiny on the paper, not correct.
I've struggled with scales for a long time and I really need help on this.
Could somebody tell me how to do?
Regards
Stefan
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hello
I have done my model in 1:1 in meters
But I want to print it out on an A4 with the scale 1:200 in meters.
When I try to put my scale to 1 mm = 200 units in page setup my model comes out very tiny on the paper, not correct.
I've struggled with scales for a long time and I really need help on this.
Could somebody tell me how to do?
Regards
Stefan
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by -FDC-. Go to Solution.
@Anonymous hello you can refer to this link. thanks
@Anonymous hello you can refer to this link. thanks
That is perfectly normal !
1mm = 200 units.
This is what you want but it is not what you are telling autocad.
You are telling autocad the scale.
1 drawing unit = 200 drawingunits.
That is the scaling.
But now:
Your paper is A4
In mm !
But you draw in meter!
So you should draw your A4 in meter to get the perfect scale.
If you draw your A4 0,21m x 0,297m then you can set a viewport scale of 1/200.
But now you have to use another scale when you print because autocad is using mm as a standard paper size.
You have to print 1000 times bigger (to scale the paper drawn in m to mm).
Best way to avoid this is drawing in mm.
Or you can draw your paper in mm and do the reconversion in your zoom factor.
You want 1/200
1meter is 1000mm so there is a difierence of 1000.
1 meter at 1/100 is 1000mm/100 and this should give you 10mm on paper
1meter x 1000 = 1000mm
Same for the scaling:
1/100 x 1000 = scaling of 10/1
1/200 x 1000 = scaling of 5/1
1/500 x 1000 = scaling of 2/1
1/1000 x 1000 = scaling of 1/1
That is perfectly normal !
1mm = 200 units.
This is what you want but it is not what you are telling autocad.
You are telling autocad the scale.
1 drawing unit = 200 drawingunits.
That is the scaling.
But now:
Your paper is A4
In mm !
But you draw in meter!
So you should draw your A4 in meter to get the perfect scale.
If you draw your A4 0,21m x 0,297m then you can set a viewport scale of 1/200.
But now you have to use another scale when you print because autocad is using mm as a standard paper size.
You have to print 1000 times bigger (to scale the paper drawn in m to mm).
Best way to avoid this is drawing in mm.
Or you can draw your paper in mm and do the reconversion in your zoom factor.
You want 1/200
1meter is 1000mm so there is a difierence of 1000.
1 meter at 1/100 is 1000mm/100 and this should give you 10mm on paper
1meter x 1000 = 1000mm
Same for the scaling:
1/100 x 1000 = scaling of 10/1
1/200 x 1000 = scaling of 5/1
1/500 x 1000 = scaling of 2/1
1/1000 x 1000 = scaling of 1/1
Kind of worked out the problem now. The buildings in model space are not drawn to 1:1. This seems to affect the ratio in paper space. Went to a drawing that is drawn 1:1 in model space and your answer seems to work.
I have attached one of the offending drawings.
I would like to be able to work out what .007 and .0065 are in a ratio(1:?)
I hasten to add that these were not drawn by me but I am stuck with them.
Kind of worked out the problem now. The buildings in model space are not drawn to 1:1. This seems to affect the ratio in paper space. Went to a drawing that is drawn 1:1 in model space and your answer seems to work.
I have attached one of the offending drawings.
I would like to be able to work out what .007 and .0065 are in a ratio(1:?)
I hasten to add that these were not drawn by me but I am stuck with them.
.007 = 1/142.855 Completely nonsens.
.0065 = 1/153.8 Also nonsens
I will check your file
.007 = 1/142.855 Completely nonsens.
.0065 = 1/153.8 Also nonsens
I will check your file
It's an evacuation plan, so I don't think scale is important here.
Someone just zoomed in to the desired result and rounded to .007.
It is a scale close to 1/150 but it doesn't matter if it is 1/150 or 1/152.5 or 1/157.222
It should be readable and they all should have about the same scale (as much as possible), which is .007
I wouldn't bother about the scale in this case.
It is drawn 1/1 though but in mm.
Also it is just drawn schematic (the openings for the doors are all different).
It's an evacuation plan, so I don't think scale is important here.
Someone just zoomed in to the desired result and rounded to .007.
It is a scale close to 1/150 but it doesn't matter if it is 1/150 or 1/152.5 or 1/157.222
It should be readable and they all should have about the same scale (as much as possible), which is .007
I wouldn't bother about the scale in this case.
It is drawn 1/1 though but in mm.
Also it is just drawn schematic (the openings for the doors are all different).
Cracked it, thanks for the pointers. its 100/whatever the decimal viewport = the drawing unit scale.
Not realy super critical, but like to have a answer.
Thanks all.
Cracked it, thanks for the pointers. its 100/whatever the decimal viewport = the drawing unit scale.
Not realy super critical, but like to have a answer.
Thanks all.
Don't understand what yo mean.
If you click in the viewport and type "z" press enter and type "1/150xp" you have a "clean" scale.
Don't understand what yo mean.
If you click in the viewport and type "z" press enter and type "1/150xp" you have a "clean" scale.
can you Scale Plan to 1:200 and after Print to 1 : 1 , it esay Way 😉
can you Scale Plan to 1:200 and after Print to 1 : 1 , it esay Way 😉
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