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Fairly new AutoCAD user, here.
Okay, so I know that drawings should always be drawn at a 1:1 scale, and that it’s only when a drawing has to be printed that you actually change the size of objects. Unfortunately my current problem involves working with existing drawings whose creator may not have followed this convention.
I’ll try to explain what’s happening with a specific example.
I am currently working on an existing 2D drawing directly in the model space, and the scale factor in the title block says 6:1 (the paper dimensions are supposed to be 6 times the actual dimensions).
Now let’s say I draw a straight line with a length of 1. When I do a QuickCalc to measure the length of the line, I get a result of 1. No problem. But when I attempt to dimension the line using the linear dimension command, it tells me that the length of the line is 0.1667 or 1/6 of the number I actually inputted, because the scale factor in the dimension style is set to 0.1667. But the correct (actual) dimensions are currently displayed in the model space, which suggests that everything was drawn 6 times larger than it really is…
My question is why would someone do this? Is there really a good reason that I’m just unable to see?
For me it’s a problem because:
1. I cannot dimension new geometry correctly unless I draw it 6 times larger than its actual size.
2. I cannot change the dimension scale factor in the dimension style back to 1 because it screws up all of the existing dimensions (their values become 6 times larger). This is especially problematic because I have inherited dozens of drawings that have been created this way, so it would be very time consuming to redimension all of them.
Any help, suggestions, observations, or comments would greatly appreciated… |
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