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@Anonymous wrote:
There are no dimensions on the drawing, only a scale.
I noticed that you have marked your thread as solved.
However, I add my comment here hoping it may also help others with similar situation.
There are two kinds of drawing accuracy.
1) Accuracy when comparing with the dimension and the measurement on the geometry on drawing.
1st of all, this is depended on the precision set on DWG file.
We all expect drafter (architect/engineer/surveyor, etc.) draws everything accurately. But this is not happen all time in real life.
For example, the length of a line or the dimension on this line is 10.0555 as designed. When the precision is set to 0.0, the measurement returns 10.1.
We also say this is a reading error.
On the other hand, If the length of a line is designed as 10 and "actually" it is drawn as 10.0555. (obviously the precision is set to 0.0000)
(BTW I have seen this a lot in my work place. And I am wondering why the drafters drawn something with decimal points when it supposed to be an integral length.)
The designer will now have to determine if the drawing is acceptable or not - it depends on the tolerance is set.
2) Accuracy when comparing with the dimension on drawing and the measurement on site.
This seems straightforward. Once the tolerance is set, the designer should make his judgement easily.
The scale on the drawing and your scale ruler would be the only reference when there are no dimensions shown.
HTH
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A circle is the locus of a cursor, starting and ending at the same point on a plane in model space or in layout such that its distance from a given coordinates (X,Y) is always constant.
X² + Y² = C²