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  1. #1
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    Default AutoCAD 2010 scaling help

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    For a school project, I had to survey a piece of land and make a drawing of it. The size we surveyed was 80x60 divided into 16 20x15 individual plots. We also had to add trees, roads and other various surrounding objects.

    The paper has to be on size B(11x17) and must include a title block. I've plotted everything I need, and all I have to do is scale it to equal 1" on the paper is 20' in the plot and create a title block.

    For the scaling: I've tried going to Output>Page Setup Manager, but I can't get it to work properly. I also don't have a printer capable for printing this size paper, so I can't have a practice print. How can I do so to make sure it matches the scale?

    For the title block: I was going to make it in a layout tab once I got the scaling down. I'm not sure if this is the right thing to do, so I could use some help here too.

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    As for scaling, remember that 1 foot is 12 inches. For 1"=20', the actual scale is 1 to 240. Look into scale lists.

    If you have a printer and it can handle 8 1/2 x 11, you could print two halves of your drawing. If your print preview looks okay, though, the print should be okay.

    As for title blocks, some people put them in paper space, some in model space. I prefer paper space, because that reduces clutter around the model and sometimes there are multiple layouts.
    breaking AutoCAD on a regular basis since 1991

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    yes i'd definitely put the title block in paper space - please do not scale the model ALWAYS DRAW AT FULL SIZE! then use a viewport in paperspace and make that whatever weird imperial scale you desire!

    this way you will also plot your paper space at full size, i.e. scale 1:1.

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    I knew to always draw it at full size, so that's been done. And I've tried to set the scale 1' to 240 units, but that makes the model space (it's labeled viewport when I roll my mouse over it) ridiculously small. I can print it to a PDF to make sure it's okay, that way I'm not wasting paper yet. Here's my settings I used, and a PDF that was created using the settings.

    settings:
    Attachment 26858

    pdf:
    Attachment 26859

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    I have approved your post.

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    Quote Originally Posted by designerstuart View Post
    yes i'd definitely put the title block in paper space - please do not scale the model ALWAYS DRAW AT FULL SIZE! then use a viewport in paperspace and make that whatever weird imperial scale you desire!

    this way you will also plot your paper space at full size, i.e. scale 1:1.
    Set your plot scale to 1:1
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    Cad64: Thanks for approving the post. I'll make sure to meet he requirement before I post two or more links again.

    SLW210: If I set it to 1:1, how do I make it so it prints at 1" to 20'?

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    Quote Originally Posted by designerstuart View Post
    yes i'd definitely put the title block in paper space - please do not scale the model ALWAYS DRAW AT FULL SIZE! then use a viewport in paperspace and make that whatever weird imperial scale you desire!

    this way you will also plot your paper space at full size, i.e. scale 1:1.
    Just follow the directions by designerstart.

    Make your title block the size of your paper that you will be plotting, make a viewport and scale the model to fit in your titleblock.
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    Quote Originally Posted by CyberAngel View Post
    As for scaling, remember that 1 foot is 12 inches. For 1"=20', the actual scale is 1 to 240. Look into scale lists.

    If you have a printer and it can handle 8 1/2 x 11, you could print two halves of your drawing. If your print preview looks okay, though, the print should be okay.

    As for title blocks, some people put them in paper space, some in model space. I prefer paper space, because that reduces clutter around the model and sometimes there are multiple layouts.

    Unless they used 1 unit of measure = 1', then the scale would be 1/20xp. If 1 unit of measure = 1" then it would be 1/240xp.
    "You are entitled to your own opinion but you are not entitled to your own facts." Daniel Patrick Moynihan

  10. #10
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    I'm sorry, but I'm still confused. I'm not sure if I've asked the wrong question, or that everybody is telling me the right answer, and I don't understand how to do it.

    I've made it 1:1 (and I did use 1 unit of measure = 1'), but that makes it so the veiwport will fill up the entire paper. That part is what I wanted and thank you.

    Unfortunatley, I need to scale the actual drawing in the model space to make it so 20' in the drawing is 1" in real life. If possible, I can post the project I am working on to see if it would help clarify, or if I'm doing it completely wrong.

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