OP, it's time to BECOME a fan of paperspace. Back in the 90s I never understood it, and that was when one would have to type in a value for TILEMODE. It was also when one had to go back and forth between several sections of the guide book that used to come in hard copy with the program, just to piece together any idea of how to do it. Nowadays there is so much helpful content through the online Help and other sources - lots of it free!
Back then I found, just by playing around, what paperspace was all about, just by making multiple viewports in modelspace and telling myself there has to be some way to group these views to plot exactly how I see them.
With paperspace, it's the viewport you assign a zoom scale to, with easy to use dropdowns as well as the status bar at the bottom of the screen. You can have multiple viewports on one sheet, each at a different zoomscale than its brethren. You can set your output (plotting) variables there too.
Linetypes were the earliest annotative object, so that's where the advice on setting various variables to 1 comes from. You should hit F1 and read up on working with paperspace. You will find the use of CANNOSCALE there, as well as multiple layout (paperspace) tabs - yes, you can have an entire drawing set in one file, each sheet on its own tab. And by starting with one tab set up (including output), you can copy to make new tabs, already set with the same variables. Or you can have some tabs for one kind of output, and others for another kind. There are lots of us here ready and willing to give advice and help.
One last thing is, if you do take up this method, remember to lock your viewports once you have them set to the scales you are using!
If by some odd chance my nattering was useful -- that's great, glad to help. But if it actually solved your issue, then please mark my solution as accepted 🙂