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Stillthunder666
Newbie
Joined: 20.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD2011 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
Topic: engineering to architectualPosted: 20.Feb.2011 at 18:30 |
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I did my almost all of my graduation project in the units of engineering, so 1ft. was 1.0 and 1ft 6in. was 1.5. Is there anyway i can scale my project to architectual without redrawing the whole thing?
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HAWDesigner
Senior Member
Joined: 04.Aug.2008 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD R14, AutoCAD 2009, AutoCAD 2010 Status: Offline Points: 310 |
Posted: 20.Feb.2011 at 19:23 |
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The only time you would ever need to scale a DWG would be when you're converting from Metric to Standard (or vice versa). Changing your units (engineering, architectural, decimal, etc) doesn't affect the length of an object.
But to answer your question: Yes, you can scale any 1 or all objects in your entire drawing without having to redraw anything by using the SCALE command. Since you're still a student, I highly recommend you use the F1 Key as frequently as possible. AutoCAD has an impeccable HELP system that you should use daily. If not, then you're robbing yourself of valuable information. Good Luck!!! |
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R. Williams AutoCAD 2010 Certified Professional <!-- If all else fails hit F1 --> <<AutoCAD 2009 |
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John Connor
Senior Member
Joined: 01.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD 2018 Status: Offline Points: 7175 |
Posted: 20.Feb.2011 at 20:14 |
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Why can't you just choose "architectural" units?
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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."
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Stillthunder666
Newbie
Joined: 20.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD2011 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
Posted: 20.Feb.2011 at 21:26 |
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i drew the drawing in engineering units. changing the units doesnt translate a unit of 1.0 to 1ft. its not the same distance. changing it to architectural wouldnt do anything. im looking for a way to scale it
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HAWDesigner
Senior Member
Joined: 04.Aug.2008 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD R14, AutoCAD 2009, AutoCAD 2010 Status: Offline Points: 310 |
Posted: 20.Feb.2011 at 22:40 |
As previously mentioned, the SCALE command will do what you need. You can also select ALL the objects you want to SCALE, pick a base grip, and depress the spacebar 3-times. Good Luck!! |
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R. Williams AutoCAD 2010 Certified Professional <!-- If all else fails hit F1 --> <<AutoCAD 2009 |
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HAWDesigner
Senior Member
Joined: 04.Aug.2008 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD R14, AutoCAD 2009, AutoCAD 2010 Status: Offline Points: 310 |
Posted: 20.Feb.2011 at 22:45 |
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By the way,
UNITS in AutoCAD are just that - units. In modelspace, you are ALWAYS drawing 1 UNIT = 1 UNIT. The only place Engineering or Architectural units come into play are when you're entering the units or showing measurements. But 1 Architectural Foot is equal to 1 Engineering Foot. It always has been, and always will be.
So again, as previously mentioned "Changing your units (engineering, architectural, decimal, etc) doesn't affect the length of an object." Edited by HAWDesigner - 20.Feb.2011 at 22:46 |
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R. Williams AutoCAD 2010 Certified Professional <!-- If all else fails hit F1 --> <<AutoCAD 2009 |
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John Connor
Senior Member
Joined: 01.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD 2018 Status: Offline Points: 7175 |
Posted: 21.Feb.2011 at 00:53 |
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I don't see how changing from engineering units to architectural units is going to change the length of any of your lines.
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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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Stillthunder666
Newbie
Joined: 20.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD2011 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
Posted: 21.Feb.2011 at 06:42 |
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its fine, i did the project. it does change it though. try it out in AutoCAD. draw a line of 10. now, change the units to architectural. now draw a line of 10'. the lengths are different.
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Stillthunder666
Newbie
Joined: 20.Feb.2011 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD2011 Status: Offline Points: 4 |
Posted: 21.Feb.2011 at 06:52 |
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i just figured it out though. you just scale from it by 12. BECAUSE 12X10.0 in engineering = 10ft. in architectural.
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HAWDesigner
Senior Member
Joined: 04.Aug.2008 Location: United States Using: AutoCAD R14, AutoCAD 2009, AutoCAD 2010 Status: Offline Points: 310 |
Posted: 21.Feb.2011 at 13:53 |
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That's because when you first drew your object of 10, it was 10 units. But when you drew your 2nd object of 10', you actually set the FT.
Try this out: Draw a line of 10, then WITHOUT changing to Architectural, draw a 2nd object of 10'. They too are different, because you specified 2 different lengths. Here, read this tip: http://www.cadforum.cz/cadforum_en/how-to-convert-a-drawing-from-inches-to-centimeters-tip7103 Note, when scaling by 12, you scaled from INCHES to FEET. You did not change from Engineering to Architectural. Edited by HAWDesigner - 21.Feb.2011 at 13:55 |
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R. Williams AutoCAD 2010 Certified Professional <!-- If all else fails hit F1 --> <<AutoCAD 2009 |
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engineering to architectual
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Stillthunder666 wrote: