Line weights not displayed correctly

Line weights not displayed correctly

Anonymous
Not applicable
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Message 1 of 10

Line weights not displayed correctly

Anonymous
Not applicable

I made a test with line weights, listing from 0.00 to 0.40 mm but for some AutoCAD only seems to display 3 line weights.  Here is the test, and lwdisplay is set to 1:

jbm1990_0-1745388128373.png

However, when I generate a PDF with it (with autocad general documentation print) it does display correctly and you can actually tell the difference between 0.00 and 0.25 mm visually:

jbm1990_1-1745388386779.png


Is there a way to fix this and view the lines above (model) like the ones below (printed viewport)? 

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Replies (9)
Message 2 of 10

cadffm
Consultant
Consultant

Hi,

 

NO. Acad lwdisplay is just a helper for your eyes, what does not show the real lineweight.

 

In Options, you can set lineweight displaying bolder, but for all lineweights.

 

 

Sebastian

Message 3 of 10

Anonymous
Not applicable

Can you point me where you can set that in options?

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Message 4 of 10

cadffm
Consultant
Consultant

Click in OPTIONS in my answer above,  it's a link to the Help[F1]

Sebastian

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Message 5 of 10

cadffm
Consultant
Consultant

This Lineweight settings Button will open the Lineweights settings dialog

Sebastian

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Message 6 of 10

paullimapa
Mentor
Mentor
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Message 7 of 10

Anonymous
Not applicable

Thanks. I see there is no solution.

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Message 8 of 10

Brock_Olly
Collaborator
Collaborator

Our 'solution' is we all draw with lineweights off, meaning all lines are the same thickness in autocad.
We assign weights to colours using the plot styles.
White (black) > tick
Red > thin
Yellow > medium
Green >...

Purple >...
etc.

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Message 9 of 10

paullimapa
Mentor
Mentor

Which sounds exactly like what AutoCAD offers from the beginning of time with ctb color pen weight assignments. I realized having worked many years with coworkers in the industry that it’s very easy for the eye to associate a set of different colors with their respective printed line weights. This is how I derived the family of colors which provide up to 6 different lineweights based on color hue:

Cyan = Extra Thick

Yellow = Thick

Magenta = Medium 

Green = Thin

Red .= Fine

Blue = Extra Fine 

Once you establish this kind of hierarchy anything that’s red on the screen your brain automatically recognizes as objects that would print lighter than compared to others that look yellow on the screen and etc. 


Paul Li
IT Specialist
@The Office
Apps & Publications | Video Demos
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Message 10 of 10

pendean
Community Legend
Community Legend

@Anonymous What you crave is going to only be visible in a pre-configured layout (aka on your output paper) only, not in modelspace, and only when you are zoomed in close enough to see your low-variations in your example.

 

Welcome to CAD drafting.

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