Community
AutoCAD Forum
cancel
Showing results for 
Show  only  | Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

How to print correct scale?

8 REPLIES 8
SOLVED
Reply
Message 1 of 9
Anonymous
19846 Views, 8 Replies

How to print correct scale?

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

8 REPLIES 8
Message 2 of 9
ennujozlagam
in reply to: Anonymous

@Anonymous hello you can refer to this link. thanks





Remember : without the difficult times in your LIFE, you wouldn't be who you are today. Be grateful for the good and the bad. ANGER doesn't solve anything. It builds nothing, but it can destroy everything...
Please mark this response as "Accept as Solution" if it answers your question. Kudos gladly accepted.
Message 3 of 9
-FDC-
in reply to: Anonymous

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

Tags (1)
Message 4 of 9
Anonymous
in reply to: -FDC-

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.

 

Message 5 of 9
-FDC-
in reply to: Anonymous

.007 = 1/142.855 Completely nonsens.

.0065 = 1/153.8 Also nonsens

 

I will check your file

 

Message 6 of 9
-FDC-
in reply to: Anonymous

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).

Message 7 of 9
Anonymous
in reply to: -FDC-

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.

Message 8 of 9
-FDC-
in reply to: Anonymous

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.

Message 9 of 9
planner_matlabi
in reply to: Anonymous

can you Scale Plan to 1:200 and after Print to 1 : 1 , it esay Way 😉

Can't find what you're looking for? Ask the community or share your knowledge.

Post to forums  

Technology Administrators


AutoCAD Beta