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You have not disclosed the history of your drawing. Is it yours? Did you start it from scratch or did you inherit the drawing from someone else?
This drawing has beginnings in a metric template--not an imperial one. Go to modelspace and turn on and thaw all layers. Then SELECTALL and COPY WITH BASE POINT, using 0,0 as the base point. Open a brand new, fresh imperial template and paste using 0,0 as the insertion point. Then set up your layout tabs. If you follow cut-and-paste and use an imperial template, you'll be fine.
<<Hint: when selecting a sheet size, be cognizant how Acad describes the sheet dimensions--it is width x height, not the other way around--so choose your sheet size according, i.e. W34"xH22" is ANSI-D is landscape orientation, whereas W22"xH34" is ANSI-D in portrait. This is because the width is always first and height is always second.>>
Even though you have selected ANSI-D 22"x34" as the sheet size in plot dialog window and even though you have assigned architectural imperial scale to your viewport, and even though you go to confession on Thursdays and to church on Sundays, doesn't necessarily mean your layout tab will always plot correctly.
Note 1: Unlike modelspace where drawing units can take on various units (mm, cm, meters, in, ft, etc. or unitless) paperspace is not so forgiving. In paperspace (or on layout tab) the units are inches for imperial templates OR are millimeters for metric templates. There are no exceptions.
Note 2: You can 'trick' AutoCAD into plotting a 34mmx24mm onto a sheet sized 34"x22" when you are using a metric template and doing it this way would require you to use a metric scale bar, not imperial inches because you are physically drawing in millimeters or meters, not feet and inches. (I won't cover the trick in this post.)
Chicagolooper