Jump to content

STB and CTB advantages/ disadvantages


rkent

Recommended Posts

I dont care, as long as the workers in the fab shop can read the drawings easily and make what is required.

I think it more comes down to the plotters print quality.

 

How sad was that little speech anyway.

stb ctb.....

Im more worried about how to get rid of this STD I got from that BBW I met last month in NYC.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...
  • Replies 42
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

  • rkent

    7

  • michaeloureiro

    6

  • drwhite

    6

  • NBC

    5

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

Ok. I too had always used a CTB for plotting. After coming to Mech 2010 though, I found that the page setup seemed to only apply to the MODEL tab. I could not apply a named page setup to a layout. I have used layouts, I guess, sort of like this sheet sets concept. I still don't understand sheet sets. But, I digress. I created an STB. I now get the correct lineweights plotted without having to edit anything. Keep you posted on further errors.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Nowadays, you can assign different lineweights and colors for every viewport an for every layer. You don't need to assign different CTB to every layout. You can use true color even in AutoCAD LT. True color will be printed coloured anyway, with every ctb.

So, you can always use Monochrome.ctb to plot both black and white (ACI colors) and full color (True color).

I think the only reson you have to use old fashion CTB (every ACI color = different plotted width/color) is: you deal with people still using customized ctbs, or you have old drawings using your own ctbs.

I don't see any reason to use STB: they are more powerful than ctb, but quite nobody knows them, so we can say they are "out of standard"; I mean, if You use them, other people may not understand your drawings, and the good thing with AutoCAD is that everybody working with a CAD understands it.

 

I think: if we all use monochrome, we can say end to sending customized files for plot styles, and have a common working standard (using other ctb or stb only in some very special cases)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Whether or not I'm using an STB or CTB is immaterial to me. I don't plot color plots for a machine shop or a tool and die shop. I print Black and White. I want to have a professional looking drawing with multiple pen weights, thick for visible line, thin for hidden and dimensioning lines. Sort of like I was taught by French and Vierck years ago. Remember the "language of lines"? My problem is that I can plot with a pen setup in model space, but I cannot do it in paper space. Is there someway with the sheetset that I can do this? In paper space you can supposedly "import" a page setup, but it never appears, it just says it has been defined. I can't use it, but it has been defined. Well, how can I use it? Do I have to create another page setup from scratch every time I click on a layout tab within the drawing? Somebody explain all this to me.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Whether or not I'm using an STB or CTB is immaterial to me. I don't plot color plots for a machine shop or a tool and die shop. I print Black and White. I want to have a professional looking drawing with multiple pen weights, thick for visible line, thin for hidden and dimensioning lines. Sort of like I was taught by French and Vierck years ago. Remember the "language of lines"? My problem is that I can plot with a pen setup in model space, but I cannot do it in paper space. Is there someway with the sheetset that I can do this? In paper space you can supposedly "import" a page setup, but it never appears, it just says it has been defined. I can't use it, but it has been defined. Well, how can I use it? Do I have to create another page setup from scratch every time I click on a layout tab within the drawing? Somebody explain all this to me.

CTB has nothing to do with Plotting in color. CTB has everything to do with assigning a line thickness and other properties to a color so your eyes can distinguish easily what line will be what thickness via the setup of your CTB file that you create. You can set each color to plot monochrome, but utilize the lineweights, linetypes, line styles, and some other properties.

 

The best thing about computers is the ability to reference through memory. That's all a CTB really does.... it references a mapped grid of properties to every object in your drawing. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HI

 

Differences using paper space (layouts)

The setup you do in Model space is the same you do in layouts. No difference (apart from setting plot to 1:1 and using viewport view scale to plot in scale), so your doubt has no basis. In AutoCAD R14 the plot setup was forgotten every time. The only way to avoid reconfigure every time was to plot always in the same way (awful), or save it as a .pc2.

From version 2000 to version 2005, your plot setup (model or paper space) was stored by default in every sheet (model or layout) when you plotted. In AutoCAD 2005 and later the default is not to store it, you can see it because there's a check box for this, and now it's not checked by default. Check the checkbox and everytime you plot your page setup will be saved in your drawing. Anyway, if you use the "Apply" button, it is stored even if the checkbox is not checked.

 

Page setups: where are them?

You can use File menu to manage page setups.

You can't apply model space page setups in layouts, the same way you can't apply layout page setups in model space. When you are in a layout and create a new page setup, you can use it in any other layout.

 

Lineweights

Especially if you are plotting Black and White, you set lineweights in layers (or, if needed, also in single object's properties, but I don't suggest it, for the same reason for I don't suggest to apply colors directly to objects: use layers colors and lineweights and bylayer property for objects, instead).

So:

  1. go to layers properties (LAYER command)
  2. set lineweights and colors for every layer (see the columns "color" and "lineweight")
  3. create objects with "ByLayer" for their color and lineweight
  4. use Monochrome.ctb when you plot (expand plot window and choose monochrome from plot styles dropdown list)

That's all. It's simple and professional.

Colors are useful in the screen to recognize object's layer, but they will be printed black.

 

If you really want to use your AutoCAD like if it was an AutoCAD R14 (but it was 1995..), you can use different plot configurations, and not Monochrome.ctb, or even customize them. But if you want to send your drawings to anyone without attaching customized CTBs, you shouldn't. I suggest to use the standard monochrome, instead.

 

At the end..

Everyone works like he likes more with AutoCAD. Somebody is acquainted with customizing ACI colors/lineweights conversion tables and they obviously work good anyway.

Mine are only suggestions to simplify using modern autocad features, because I have to be always up to date, cause my work is teaching AutoCAD in a Autodesk Authorized Training Center in Italy (that's why my bad english...), so I know a bit of what Autodesk thinks about best work flush. But the best advantage of using AutoCAD is that, depending on your work and your preferences, you can do it the way you like, and many ways and they maybe are still all "the right way"...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey drWhite

 

I forgot to say:

in AutoCAD Mechanical you have an advanced layer management, that shows different windows for layers from AutoCAD.

You should go to AutoCAD Options Dialog box (right click command bar and you'll find Options in the menu) and change your layer settings there, in the tab where you also set your standards for mechanical dimensions, texts, etc.

This will affect the drawing you have opened while you go to options, so if you want to change your template (the dwt you use), open it and do these modifications there, then save it.

 

Last question: Mechanical has a good management of plot also in Model space, with different scale areas, automatical dimension measurement scale and so on. If you don't like layouts, while do you use them?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

get a lot of outside drawings and the ones that irk me the most are the one where the ctb has been eliminated altogether...luckily, Autodesk was kind enough to post TS1055860...

 

to change from stb to ctb type convertpstyles at the command line and voila, all your favorite plot styles show up...

 

to change from ctb to stb type convertctb at the command line...pick the ctb you want to use as an stb and away you go...:)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I want to testify that all the responses after my reply from StykFace, mtrasi, and especially MikeC1956 have been of tremendous help to me. Like Mikes, CONVERTCTB. I always heard for years that most AutoCAD users don't make use of more than 10% (if that) of the available commands and variables inside AutoCAD. I am so glad I found this forum. I read it daily if possible in the last 20 minutes of my lunch hour. Like the old man in Python's Holy Grail, "....but I'm getting better".

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

OK. All I want to know is this. If I choose a page setup in Model space, the plot prints out exactly like I want it, darker, thicker lines for visible objects, thinner lines for dimensions, section lines, etc. On that page setup I have specified a CTB. No particular reason other than it allows me to set the pen width to the color, turn off dithering, and create a professional looking plot. Now to my problem. I cannot do this in paper space. The only way is to plot the model space, then follow up to plot a paper space (or layout) using "previous plot". I tried converting a CTB to STB. Did a page setup using STB thusly converted. Same result, all lines are barely visible. I just wish it were simple. No CTB, no STB, just plot by lineweight assigned in the layer command. How does one do that?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We routinely plot from a layout using a CTB with no problem. We even have our lineweights specified in the Layer Properties Manager in some drawings and still have no problems.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We routinely plot from a layout using a CTB with no problem. We even have our lineweights specified in the Layer Properties Manager in some drawings and still have no problems.

Amen to that.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm still new enough and haven't plotted much really. I read through all this and you all have good points....

 

but what does STB and CTB stand for?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

OK. Figured it out. Just pick plotter, specify the plot style, and if the preview is right, you're done. Doesn't matter if you're on the Model tab, or a layout tab. Most of the time you'll have to do a page setup to set things right for that layout. Always did it that way.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Again. I opened another drawing session. Picked a drawing from a different directory. Same support path, everything. Picked plot. On the model tab. Picked plot. Picked the printer I wanted and none on page setup. Wasn't right. Exited, went to page setup. Pick the printer. Picked the CTB I wanted. Picked paper, plot with styles, extents, yada, yada. When I clicked apply, Autocad asked if I wanted apply THESE settings to all layouts. I selected YES, and apply. Preview was what I wanted. Went to layout tab. Clicked plot. Bingo, nothing like what I said APPLY TO ALL LAYOUTS.

Why didn't it take?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Again. I opened another drawing session. Picked a drawing from a different directory. Same support path, everything. Picked plot. On the model tab. Picked plot. Picked the printer I wanted and none on page setup. Wasn't right. Exited, went to page setup. Pick the printer. Picked the CTB I wanted. Picked paper, plot with styles, extents, yada, yada. When I clicked apply, Autocad asked if I wanted apply THESE settings to all layouts. I selected YES, and apply. Preview was what I wanted. Went to layout tab. Clicked plot. Bingo, nothing like what I said APPLY TO ALL LAYOUTS.

Why didn't it take?

 

Modelspace pagesetups can't be used in PS and vise-a-versa. Not sure why it would ask to apply to all when in MS, another feature I guess.

 

You will want to establish all your pagesetups in a common file, I use my template, and then import them in with the click of a button, pick the one you want and hit ok. No sense reinventing the wheel every time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

Is the Plot Style column grayed out and you're unable to select a style? If so I'm assuming you're still in a drawing that is set up for CTB.

 

Type CONVERTPSTYLES at the command line and see if that helps.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


×
×
  • Create New...