ReMark Posted September 8, 2010 Posted September 8, 2010 I'm beginning to believe that your friend may have created his own acad.mnu file and passed it along to you. Quote
oldcodger Posted September 21, 2010 Author Posted September 21, 2010 I'm beginning to believe that your friend may have created his own acad.mnu file and passed it along to you. Sorry for the delay in getting back to you but I have been trying to get hold of a laptop with the exact same Auto Cad on it. This one has a quite normal tool bar and thet came from the same disc! Any ideas? Oldcodger Quote
Tankman Posted September 21, 2010 Posted September 21, 2010 Try Chapter 40! http://www.andrew.cmu.edu/course/48-568/2DVideosWEB_files/frame.htm I have AutoCAD 2000, who cares? I currently use '07 but, save to vs. 2000. A few of my clients request, "send a *.dwg file in vs. 2000." 'Course these are trusted clients otherwise they get a *.pdf. Quote
Tankman Posted September 21, 2010 Posted September 21, 2010 I'm beginning to believe that your friend may have created his own acad.mnu file and passed it along to you. Would it be possible to install ACAD with a custom acad.mnu file? After install from the original CD(s) I would think, install your own revised or create a customized acad.mnu file. Can we install with a customized *.mnu file while installing AutoCAD? I don't think so. After install, I think we create our own *.mnu file. Quote
dheiva Posted September 7, 2012 Posted September 7, 2012 how to use templates for isometric 2d piping drawings Quote
ReMark Posted September 7, 2012 Posted September 7, 2012 Creating a template doesn't have all that much to do with an isometric piping drawing unless you take into account your layers, dimension and text styles and maybe your title block and border. What seems to be the problem? Quote
rkent Posted September 7, 2012 Posted September 7, 2012 how to use templates for isometric 2d piping drawings Tell us what your definition of a "template" is and maybe we can provide more information. Just want to make sure we are talking about the same thing. Quote
Ski_Me Posted October 2, 2012 Posted October 2, 2012 :halloween:Drawing in iso is easy just rotate 30 degrees to the right or left and boom your drawing in iso. I hardly use the snap settings or change the cursor. Remeber in ortho or iso your only drawing in 1 view in 3d your drawing in 6 views. Quote
rehman malik Posted October 2, 2012 Posted October 2, 2012 Its simple. Just try the following steps buddy, Click on the grid display in the bar open up the settings penal from there change your styling to SNAP style then as per your requirement select the appropriate one. Quote
tzframpton Posted October 2, 2012 Posted October 2, 2012 SNAPSTYL = 1. F5 key to toggle Top/Right/Left Isoplane. Make sure Polar is set to 30 degree increments, with 45,90,135,315 additional angles enabled. Done. Quote
Ski_Me Posted December 31, 2012 Posted December 31, 2012 Just add 30 degrees to everything you draw screw changing the snap style hell I don't even use a grid! A I barely use the cursor Quote
ReMark Posted January 1, 2013 Posted January 1, 2013 Just add 30 degrees to everything you draw screw changing the snap style hell I don't even use a grid! A I barely use the cursor In my opinion this is poor advice to give anyone who has never done as isometric drawing using AutoCAD. Quote
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