Hi @Liesl_H
Image-1: Here's the Calgary asc in another program, Global Mapper. The downloaded acs is 4.18 GBs. It took about 60 seconds to add two files: the acs and the topo map. To crop, I drew a tiny red rectangle in the middle and used it as the cropping edge. It demarcates the 'area' I want to keep.
Image-1
Image-2: Back in AutoCAD, I add the newly cropped asc to modelspace (FDO connection) and it looks like this. At this point I could delete the asc from the drawing since I no longer need it. Instead of deleting though, I un-check the asc from the Map Task Pane.
Image-2
Image-3: I can create a surface using the same cropped asc as the surface definition.
Image-3
Image-4: Here's the surface with the contours turned OFF. It's using a surface style that displays just the triangles. You can clearly see a square pattern with diagonals running through each square. This is because ASC format is a grid consisting of pixels and you could say each pixel color represents elevation. The surface isn't generated by 'elevated points' where the elevation is based on the point's z-value. If it was you'd see triangulation, not squares & diagonals.
<<The big white roof left of center is the IKEA Store. The Bow River is on the right.>>
Image-4
Image-5: Here's the same surface with the triangles turned OFF and the contours turned ON.
Image-5
Image-6: Here's the same asc but with a larger cropped area compared to the one shown in image-2. It extends farther in all directions, i.e. north, south, east and west. This cropped asc is 67,998 MB.
Image-6
Image-7: This is the same cropped asc as image-2. It's only 2,633 MB. For comparison, and as stated in image-1, the original downloaded asc is a whopping 4.18 GBs.
Image-7
Too bad AutoCAD chokes. It just can't handle large files easily. If it could we wouldn't get calluses pressing CNTL+ATL+DEL and all of us would be happier.
Chicagolooper
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