tone1125 Posted May 25, 2013 Posted May 25, 2013 (edited) Hey guys, This is my first post, I'd like some help with a project i'm working on. Edited May 30, 2013 by tone1125 Quote
SEANT Posted May 27, 2013 Posted May 27, 2013 Traffic at CADTutor tends to be light during the weekends. Hope the delayed response hasn't discouraged you. I guess I'm not exactly sure what's needed: Is this the shape you are going for? Quote
tone1125 Posted May 28, 2013 Author Posted May 28, 2013 (edited) Thats exactly what i'm looking for. I have included an updated completed drawings of the three different models i'm making. How do i export like that with the dimensions? On the end of the shape I want a rounded bevel though. thanks, anthony Edited May 30, 2013 by tone1125 Quote
tone1125 Posted May 28, 2013 Author Posted May 28, 2013 I figured out the dimensions thing, I need help exporting to pdf though, The lines are super thick and that when i export the drawing now. Quote
JD Mather Posted May 28, 2013 Posted May 28, 2013 You have many points that should be coincident - but are not. ANSI dimensioning standard is to suppress leading zero on dimensions less than 1. Example 0.9000 should be .9000 and probably shouldn't dimension out to 4 decimal places (very expensive to manufacture) I recommend you change all decimals to three decimal places ex. .900 and most probably to one or two places. Angle dimensions that don't mean anything to me. Missing radius dimensions. I would also learn about layers and setting color and lineweight by layers. Quote
tone1125 Posted May 29, 2013 Author Posted May 29, 2013 thanks jd, this is the first time i have opened autocad, is there a shortcut or operation to fix those points or do i have to do it manually to each one? what are the standard attributes I should be using as far as line weights, colors, etc? thanks for all your time and help! much appreciated! Quote
JD Mather Posted May 29, 2013 Posted May 29, 2013 ....what are the standard attributes I should be using as far as line weights, colors, ! Q1 I have found that the fastest method by far is to do it right the first time, but you are still in learning mode. Q2 requires a question - what country are you working in? Most in USA would use ANSI/ASME standards for the dimensioning and lineweight. Many if not all or most of these specifications can be found in the Machinery's Handbook or probably on some website and in any good Technical Drafting textbook. If you go to the store an purchase mechanical pencils you can get .7mm, .5mm and .3mm - so that is what I like to use on my drawings. .7mm for the border, titleblock boundaries, .5mm for object lines and .25mm (rounds to .3mm) for hidden lines, centerlines, dimensions/annotations. Quote
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