hi there,
Trying to draw a property outline with buildings in an area of 600 x 180 feet.
When drawing initial line, it goes off screen and I cant seem to set the drawing for that large of an area.
Used to use AutoCAD and AutoCAD LT 20 years ago, sitting here for hrs very frustrated having a hard time getting started
watched all kinds of tutorials... ๐
Solved! Go to Solution.
Solved by steven-g. Go to Solution.
thank you for answering.. look like i need to school myself on scaling interface is so different than version autocad 2000 I think?
trying to open civil template, scale, that title block as well as the page to allow 600 x 200 foot drawing.
i will just keep at it just trying to throw myself back into this..
forget scaling, ignore it completely, do not watch any videos if they even hint at scaling at this point. Just create your drawing in model space using the measurements you have and make your drawing 600x200 feet, at the moment all you need to do is figure out zooming and panning. Once the drawing is complete, then it is time to learn about layouts and that is when you look at scales.
Your title block should be inserted into a paperspace layout, and for this, the layout and title block should be set up to be actual paper sizes and usually, you have a different title block setup for each paper size that you might use. But as an example using a portrait sheet of 11 x 8.5 your title block could take up the whole width of the paper and maybe an inch at the bottom of the sheet and then taking off an area for the border you would have a space of 9.5 x 8 for your drawing, this would be where you place a viewport and it is this viewport that is the only thing that should use a scale.
And this is where I step out of my comfort zone as I use metric, but the measurements laid out above will give you a scale of 1/64" = 1'-0" from the standard inbuilt Autocad scales. And from here you decide if that is a reasonable scale or whether you would need to change the size of the paper used so that you can use a bigger scale.
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