Introduction
There has alwas been some confusion over the size of standard ISO drawing sheets with AutoCAD.The stated sizes in the plot dialogue box are not the true ISO sizes, rather they relate to the plotted area on standard size cut sheets. Obviously it is not possible to print right to the edge of cut sheets, so the AutoCAD sizes quoted are always smaller than the true cut sheet size. See the "Paper Size" dialogue box on the right.Paper sizes in millimetres | |||
---|---|---|---|
A0 | 1189 | x | 841 |
A1 | 841 | x | 594 |
A2 | 594 | x | 420 |
A3 | 420 | x | 297 |
A4 | 297 | x | 210 |
A5 | 210 | x | 148 |
Drawing ISO Sheets in AutoCAD
The simplest way to draw drawing sheet outlines is to use the Rectangle command, picking the lower left hand point and then entering a relative co-ordinate for the upper right.For example
To draw an A3 sheet:- Start the Rectangle command, type RECTANG at the command prompt, pick "Rectangle" from the "Draw" pull-down or click on the
button.
- At the Chamfer/Elevation/Fillet/Thickness/Width/<First corner>: prompt, pick a point somewhere in the lower left of the drawing area.
- At the Other corner: prompt, enter a relative co-ordinate using the appropriate drawing sheet dimensions, type @420,297 and right click or
at the keyboard.
- Your drawing sheet outline will now be drawn at the correct size. If you cannot see all of the rectangle, use Zoom Extents to view the whole thing. You can do this by typing Z
E
at the keyboard (Z is the keyboard shortcut for the Zoom command).
Drawing Scaled ISO Sheets
The drawing sheet sizes in the table above can easily be used to draw sheet outlines in Paper Space since plotting from Paper Space should always normally be at a scale of 1=1 and Paper Space drawing units should be equivalent to millimetres. However, drawing sheet outlines in Model Space is rather more complicated because you need to take into account both the intended plot scale and the drawing units (which may not be millimetres). Fortunately there is a straightforward formula which you can use to determine the actual size of your required sheet outline in drawing units.Drawing Units per metre x Scale x Sheet Size in metres
For example
An A3 sheet at 1:200 and drawing units in millimeters can be calulated as follows:1000 x 200 x 0.420 = 84000
1000 x 200 x 0.297 = 59400
An A3 sheet at 1:500 and drawing units in metres can be calculated as follows:
1 x 500 x 0.420 = 210.0
1 x 500 x 0.297 = 148.5
Plotting from Model Space
Plot Scale | Plotted MM | Drawing Units | |
---|---|---|---|
1:20 | 1 | = | 0.02 |
1:50 | 1 | = | 0.05 |
1:200 | 1 | = | 0.2 |
1:500 | 1 | = | 0.5 |
1:1250 | 1 | = | 1.25 |
1:2500 | 1 | = | 2.5 |
that's all. i hope this can be usefull for you ;)
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