I need to generate a site plan to scale in AutoCAD for a large solar array. Is there any way to import a picture at scale from Google Earth? I know that I cannot do it directly in AutoCAD LT, but is there a way to do it through SketchUp? I can import from Google Earth into SketchUp at scale; is there a way to export it so that AutoCAD will receive it at scale?
Thanks,
Gordon
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I need to generate a site plan to scale in AutoCAD for a large solar array. Is there any way to import a picture at scale from Google Earth? I know that I cannot do it directly in AutoCAD LT, but is there a way to do it through SketchUp? I can import from Google Earth into SketchUp at scale; is there a way to export it so that AutoCAD will receive it at scale?
Thanks,
Gordon
Solved! Go to Solution.
I figured out a way to do it. It's not perfect but it will suffice for my needs, I believe.
I figured out a way to do it. It's not perfect but it will suffice for my needs, I believe.
That really is about the best method you could employ. Because the GE image is an image it's going to be like any other where you have to verify the scale in AutoCAD before you can work with it. You'd do the same thing with any .png file, whether it's from a photo or something else. In my case I'll do the same thing with PDFs. Rather than import them directly I'll resave them first as a .png (there will often be a savings in file size) and then import and go thru the same procedure... check rotation first, then scale.
I love SketchUp too. There are a lot of features in it that I'd love to see Autodesk employ. I do miss SU's ability to import DWG files now tho'. Now it's only available in the pro version. It used to be in the free one. 🙂
Dave
That really is about the best method you could employ. Because the GE image is an image it's going to be like any other where you have to verify the scale in AutoCAD before you can work with it. You'd do the same thing with any .png file, whether it's from a photo or something else. In my case I'll do the same thing with PDFs. Rather than import them directly I'll resave them first as a .png (there will often be a savings in file size) and then import and go thru the same procedure... check rotation first, then scale.
I love SketchUp too. There are a lot of features in it that I'd love to see Autodesk employ. I do miss SU's ability to import DWG files now tho'. Now it's only available in the pro version. It used to be in the free one. 🙂
Dave
I figured out a more direct way to do it. In Google Earth there is a scale bar that you can turn on, and when you save the image in GE you can import it into AutoCAD. Then you can dimension the scale bar, figure out the ratio of the dimension to the number on the bar, and scale the image accordingly. No need to go through SketchUp.
I figured out a more direct way to do it. In Google Earth there is a scale bar that you can turn on, and when you save the image in GE you can import it into AutoCAD. Then you can dimension the scale bar, figure out the ratio of the dimension to the number on the bar, and scale the image accordingly. No need to go through SketchUp.
That will get you close, but I like to be certain.
When I want to combine an image, usually an orhographci, with a drawing file rather than trust the scale on the image I'll find two points on the image that mate with known points on the CAD file. Then a line on the image provides a check of the correct distance. Any difference will be adjusted using the SCALE command on the image. I'll do the same thing to adjust rotation... even if it's just a minor tweak. Find two nice lines that can be checked against each other, find the angle error if any, and rotate the image to the CAD file. Now you're good to go.
No matter what, to get the scale correct on the image you've got to have a known distance somewhere. And I've seen enough other problems with GE images to be more than a little suspicious.
Dave
That will get you close, but I like to be certain.
When I want to combine an image, usually an orhographci, with a drawing file rather than trust the scale on the image I'll find two points on the image that mate with known points on the CAD file. Then a line on the image provides a check of the correct distance. Any difference will be adjusted using the SCALE command on the image. I'll do the same thing to adjust rotation... even if it's just a minor tweak. Find two nice lines that can be checked against each other, find the angle error if any, and rotate the image to the CAD file. Now you're good to go.
No matter what, to get the scale correct on the image you've got to have a known distance somewhere. And I've seen enough other problems with GE images to be more than a little suspicious.
Dave
Aye, but there's the rub, innit? Establishing two points a known distance apart may be a tough requirement to fill if it's a site you have never visited, much less measured.
I have had occasion, however, to make measurements on a site in Google Earth and then go and measure it with a surveyor's tape. On a 300' roofline there was less than a 1' discrepancy between the two measurements. I would not use it to size structural members from space, but for what we were doing (laying out a rooftop PV system for a quote) it was surprisingly accurate.
Aye, but there's the rub, innit? Establishing two points a known distance apart may be a tough requirement to fill if it's a site you have never visited, much less measured.
I have had occasion, however, to make measurements on a site in Google Earth and then go and measure it with a surveyor's tape. On a 300' roofline there was less than a 1' discrepancy between the two measurements. I would not use it to size structural members from space, but for what we were doing (laying out a rooftop PV system for a quote) it was surprisingly accurate.
Yup, a rub it is. I think for estimating and order of magnitude purposes your method will be good enough.
Dave.
Yup, a rub it is. I think for estimating and order of magnitude purposes your method will be good enough.
Dave.
Did you realize that this thread is over four years old? I figured out how to do this a long time ago.
Did you realize that this thread is over four years old? I figured out how to do this a long time ago.
The problem is not exclusive to you, thought.
The problem is not exclusive to you, thought.
Not directly unless of course the photo is georeferenced and has a lot of other metadata. But that's most likely not what you're going for you.
But the process is really easy with the ALIGN command. You don't need to know the scale if you have some background linework to reference against the photo. All you need to do is bring the image in and place and scale it anywhere near your target area. Then select a point on the photo to match a point in your drawing. Do this for two points. Then answer Yes to rotate and scale.
ALIGN will quickly become your friend ... trust me! Have fun!
Dave
Not directly unless of course the photo is georeferenced and has a lot of other metadata. But that's most likely not what you're going for you.
But the process is really easy with the ALIGN command. You don't need to know the scale if you have some background linework to reference against the photo. All you need to do is bring the image in and place and scale it anywhere near your target area. Then select a point on the photo to match a point in your drawing. Do this for two points. Then answer Yes to rotate and scale.
ALIGN will quickly become your friend ... trust me! Have fun!
Dave
It always makes me laugh when an original poster comes back and responds to a very old thread years later when someone revives it. This ones pretty old. I think 13 years was the longest I've seen. You did come back twice though which is a new one. haha
Nick DiPietro
Cad Manager/Monkey
It always makes me laugh when an original poster comes back and responds to a very old thread years later when someone revives it. This ones pretty old. I think 13 years was the longest I've seen. You did come back twice though which is a new one. haha
Nick DiPietro
Cad Manager/Monkey
Okay.
Here I am. Walk me through it experts.
I usually do Windows Key + Shift + S and take a snip of the whole thing in google earth (north arrow, scale bar, google earth image).
I LOATHE the google earth scale feature. To get it to be an standard number is exponentially time consuming. I do a lot of these snips for proposals/pro bono type work at the firm, so honestly I don't want to divert any other team members for a quick burn (especially as a former drafter with available CAD access).
Kindly list the steps I need to move an image from google earth to autocad (specifically civil 3D, ideally spatially referenced), but whatever, I just need a scaled item on a 8.5x11 sized template:
Step 1: Locate AOI in google earth;
Step 2: ....
@Anonymous
Also. I'm interested to hear if there is a path/profile export shortcut.
Okay.
Here I am. Walk me through it experts.
I usually do Windows Key + Shift + S and take a snip of the whole thing in google earth (north arrow, scale bar, google earth image).
I LOATHE the google earth scale feature. To get it to be an standard number is exponentially time consuming. I do a lot of these snips for proposals/pro bono type work at the firm, so honestly I don't want to divert any other team members for a quick burn (especially as a former drafter with available CAD access).
Kindly list the steps I need to move an image from google earth to autocad (specifically civil 3D, ideally spatially referenced), but whatever, I just need a scaled item on a 8.5x11 sized template:
Step 1: Locate AOI in google earth;
Step 2: ....
@Anonymous
Also. I'm interested to hear if there is a path/profile export shortcut.
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