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Lvieux
Newbie
Joined: 17.Aug.2011
Location: Canada
Using: Autocad2012
Status: Offline
Points: 2
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Topic: Units Posted: 17.Aug.2011 at 21:45 |
I have a drawing with the units sets in feet and inches. Its a localisation drawing. I took the coordinate of three points in this drawing, convert them in metrics, put them in my total station, went to the field and tried to locate one of them with the coordinate of the other two. It didn't work. Someone scale the drawings into metrics and then gave me the coordinate of the points, wich were not the same as the converts one. I went back to the field and easily find my third point. Someone could explain it???????????
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John Connor
Senior Member
Joined: 01.Feb.2011
Location: United States
Using: AutoCAD 2018
Status: Offline
Points: 7175
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Posted: 17.Aug.2011 at 23:37 |
Sounds like the drawing had to be scaled first. So what's the problem?
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"Humans have a strength that cannot be measured. This is John Connor. If you are reading this, you are the resistance."
<<AutoCAD 2015>>
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Lvieux
Newbie
Joined: 17.Aug.2011
Location: Canada
Using: Autocad2012
Status: Offline
Points: 2
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Posted: 18.Aug.2011 at 14:46 |
May be, i'm not clear enough. In the drawing, the coordinate of my point is for example: 5',5' If I convert it in meter it is now 1.52,1.52 But if I scaled it to meter I will obtain something different. Why
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philippe JOSEPH
Senior Member
Joined: 14.Mar.2011
Location: France
Using: AutoCAD Mechanical 2017
Status: Offline
Points: 1493
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Posted: 18.Aug.2011 at 15:02 |
Hello, are you making that "scale convertions" by hand or informaticly ?
If you do it by hand you will have to be very precise ( use the software "convert.exe" for example or the windows calculator with ctrl+c / ctrl+v ).
The better way is to do it informatictly by using the different parameters on Autocad.
You can work on a same file seting the units on inch , foot , mile millimeters etc... with different units.
You can work in meters and put dimensions in an other unit by setting the "DDIM" parameters.
You can insert a file in millimeters in a file in inches without having to "rescale" it provide that you have the "DDUNITS" OK on each file.
I am personnaly using X,Y,Z location and it's OK provide you use the good 0,0,0 and units etc...
A good file informaticly drawn with an absolute precision will give you exact information in feed back.
Hope this will help.
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philippe JOSEPH
Senior Member
Joined: 14.Mar.2011
Location: France
Using: AutoCAD Mechanical 2017
Status: Offline
Points: 1493
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Posted: 19.Aug.2011 at 08:06 |
Hello N° 2 :
Precisions in mesures convertions :
1 inch = 25.4 mm
1 foot = 12 inches = 304.8 mm so that :
5 feet = 5 x 304.8 = 1524 mm = 1.524 m and not 1.52 m
1 yard = 3 feet = 914.4 mm
1 furlong = 220 yards = 201'168 mm
1 mile = 8 furlongs = 1'609'344 mm
Precisions in dimensions on Autocad settings :
In "DDIM" comand ( dimension settings ) pay attention to :
Principal units :
Precision : 0.000'000'00 ( 8 digits availables after the point )
Approximation ( approximate translation from french ) : 0.000'000'000 ( infinite digits availables after the point )
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FarooqiSA
Groupie
Joined: 03.Jun.2011
Location: Pakistan
Using: AutoCAD2007, 2008, 2011
Status: Offline
Points: 20
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Posted: 19.Aug.2011 at 11:36 |
Whenever you want to work on coordinates, your drawing should have to be on metric units and not architectural. There is a scale factor of 12. For example, if your drawing is in feet and inches and you want to convert it to metric, you have to scale down your drawing using scale factor 1/12.
Similarly, if your drawing is in metric units and you want to change it to feet inches, you have to scale up your drawing using scale factor 12. Now when you reduce the scale, it definitely changes the location of all points except base point. So the point 5',5' in your drawing is no more on that coordinate and shifted to some other location. That is why you are getting different values after scaling your drawing.
Hope it answers your question.
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John Connor
Senior Member
Joined: 01.Feb.2011
Location: United States
Using: AutoCAD 2018
Status: Offline
Points: 7175
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Posted: 19.Aug.2011 at 11:49 |
Are you sure of those scale factors? They don't look right to me.
These common conversion factors should be used when converting from imperial to metric and vice-versa.
1 inch is 25.4 mm
1 mm is 0.0393700787 inches
Edited by John Connor - 19.Aug.2011 at 14:30
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"Humans have a strength that cannot be measured. This is John Connor. If you are reading this, you are the resistance."
<<AutoCAD 2015>>
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John Connor
Senior Member
Joined: 01.Feb.2011
Location: United States
Using: AutoCAD 2018
Status: Offline
Points: 7175
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Posted: 19.Aug.2011 at 14:57 |
1/12th of a foot is 0.0833 inches which is not a metric dimension. Surveyors in the U.S. commonly use decimal feet/inches when taping distances and showing them on a property map. Example: 125.67' (that would be 125 feet 8 inches).
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"Humans have a strength that cannot be measured. This is John Connor. If you are reading this, you are the resistance."
<<AutoCAD 2015>>
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philippe JOSEPH
Senior Member
Joined: 14.Mar.2011
Location: France
Using: AutoCAD Mechanical 2017
Status: Offline
Points: 1493
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Posted: 19.Aug.2011 at 16:10 |
I'm quit shocked to read that the scale factor between meters and foot/inches is 12.
In fact 12 is the scale factor between inches and foot and nothing else ( 1 foot = 12 inches )
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FarooqiSA
Groupie
Joined: 03.Jun.2011
Location: Pakistan
Using: AutoCAD2007, 2008, 2011
Status: Offline
Points: 20
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Posted: 23.Aug.2011 at 11:48 |
Hey don't get shocked. Your conversion above is absolutely correct. I didn't mean to say that. May be whatever I had written was wrong but I remember I have worked out like that but only to put architectural building built in feet dimension on topographic survey plan.
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