units drawing), whereas MEASUREMENT=1 means millimeters (that is, a metric units drawing). If you start from an appropriate template drawing, as described later in this chapter, the MEASUREMENT system variable will be set correctly and you won’t ever have to think about it.
The next decision you should make before setting up a new drawing is choosing the scale at which you’ll eventually plot the drawing. This decision gives you the
You shouldn’t just invent some arbitrary scale based on your CD-ROM speed or camera’s zoom lens resolution. Most industries work with a fairly small set of approved drawing scales that are related to one another by factors of 2 or 10. If you use other scales, you’ll at best be branded a clueless newbie — and at worst have to redo all your drawings at an approved scale.
Table 3-1 lists some common architectural drawing scales, using both English and metric units. (Ratios such as 1:200 are unitless. Building plan and detail measurements often are expressed in millimeters, so you can think of 1:200 as meaning “1 millimeter on the plotted drawing equals 200 millimeters in actual building.”) The table also lists the drawing scale factor corresponding to each drawing scale and the common uses for each scale. If you work in other industries than those listed here, ask drafters or coworkers what the common drawing scales are and for what kinds of drawings they’re used.
Table 3-1 Common Architectural Drawing Scales
Drawing Scale | Drawing Scale Factor | Common Uses |
---|---|---|
1?16” = 1’–0” | 192 | Large building plans |
1?8” = 1’–0” | 96 | Building plans |
1?4” = 1’–0” | 48 | House plans |
1?2” = 1’–0” | 24 | Plan details |
1” = 1’–0” | 12 | Details |
1:200 | 200 | Large building plans |
1:100 | 100 | Building plans |
1:50 | 50 | House plans |
1:20 | 20 | Plan details |
1:10 | 10 | Details |
After you choose a drawing scale, engrave the corresponding drawing scale factor on your desk, write it on your hand, and put it on a sticky note on your monitor. You need to know the drawing scale factor for many drawing tasks, as well as for some plotting. You should be able to recite the drawing scale factor of any drawing you’re working on in AutoCAD without even thinking about it.
Even if you will use the Plot dialog box’s Fit to Paper option, rather than a specific scale factor, to plot the drawing, you need to choose an artificial scale to make text, dimensions, and other annotations appear at a useful size. Choose a scale that’s in the neighborhood of the Fit to Paper plotting factor, which AutoCAD displays in the Plot Scale area of the Plot dialog box. For example, if you determine that you need to squeeze your drawing down about 90 times to fit on the desired sheet size, choose a drawing scale of ? inch=1 foot–0 inches (drawing scale factor=96) if you’re using architectural units or 1=100 (drawing scale factor=100) for other kinds of units.
With knowledge of your industry’s common drawing scales, you can choose a provisional scale based on what you’re depicting. But you won’t know for sure whether that scale works until you compare it with the size of the paper that you want to use for plotting your drawing. Here again, most industries use a small range of standard sheet sizes. Three common sets of sizes exist, as shown in Figure 3-2 and Table 3-2:
? ANSI (American National Standards Institute)
? Architectural
? ISO (International Standard Organization)
Figure 3-2: Relationships among standard paper sizes.