DWG Import - Scale Appears Fixed
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‎2006-10-13 05:17 AM
Question: is if possible for a dwg to act like a figure/drawing that comes in at the same size? Or am I missing something new in AC10? I have always been able to match the scale either in the translator settings or in ArchiCAD, but I was told that the dwg was produced at no scale. Since I am autocadphobic, I don't understand how this is possible.
I know I can just resize the drawing elements in ArchiCAD or drop it in as a drawing, but I would prefer to import or merge it.
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‎2006-10-13 08:59 AM
Since you say you want to merge the drawing, the simplest way to do it may be to go ahead and place it as a drawing. You can then adjust the scale to what you want and explode it to get editable entities. This will place all the elements on the layer that the drawing is on, which is either a bug or a feature depending on what you want.
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‎2006-10-14 07:04 PM
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‎2006-10-15 07:59 PM
Drawings in model space will always import at 1:1 when placed in a model view. I have seen some AutoCAD users draw to scale in model space. If this is the problem you may have to get them to correct it at their end or be faced with annoying reprocessing on your end.
Otherwise, if the elements are not the correct size this is due to the drawing units selected in the translator. If the drawing unit is one mm but the translator is set to one inch then the drawing will be 25.4 times the correct size

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‎2006-10-15 11:27 PM
In autocad there is a DWGUNIT (drawing unit) that determines dimensions in a drawing. In architectural drawings in my country, where we use metric, the usual setting is 1 DWGUNIT= 1 mm (millimetre). For bigger objects, like site plans, it's often set to 1 dwgunit= 1m (metre). (I understand that a common "imperial" setting in the U.S. is 1 dwgunit = 1 inch)
When you import a dwg into Archicad, you have to know what the dwgunit is set to to get dimensions right. You set it in the translator to the unit of the imported dwg before importing. This is regardless of the units/dimensions of the Archicad file you import into. If the dwg is metric, for example 1 dwgunit = 1mm, you set it like that, even if your Archicad file uses imperial dimensions. This way the translator will give you a correctly sized import.
If you don't know how the dwgunit is set, you either have to ask, or have to guess, test-import and then measure some item of previously known size to check. If there is no such item, you simply have no other option than to ask what drawing unit they use when they draw.
When you import a model space dwg that is drawn 1:1 as it should, scale in effect has no meaning other than for text. If you know what scale the original dwg was intended to be plotted at, you should set Archicad's view scale (lower left corner of any view) to that scale. Then text will look right (the same relative size as it was in Autocad. But drawing entities won't change size because of this scale setting. Size of those is determined by the drawing unit setting!

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‎2006-10-16 05:57 AM
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‎2006-10-16 08:30 PM
Thomas wrote:Thomas, thanks for explaining & confirming that this is typical of the way some firms work. I did get the text to appear at the correct scale, but could not get the drawing elements to change. I have never run into this issue in the US. Would it be too much to ask our japanese partner to save out files for us so that I can set up a translator? If not, we can likely do that here in autocad before placing in ArchiCAD. I would like to set up translators back & forth that will be as automatic as possible, since the ArchiCAD team will grow and this process will be ongoing.
When you import a model space dwg that is drawn 1:1 as it should, scale in effect has no meaning other than for text. If you know what scale the original dwg was intended to be plotted at, you should set Archicad's view scale (lower left corner of any view) to that scale. Then text will look right (the same relative size as it was in Autocad. But drawing entities won't change size because of this scale setting. Size of those is determined by the drawing unit setting!
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‎2006-10-16 09:57 PM
Mabe wrote:If your partner is drawing at 1:1 in model space all you need to know is their drawing unit.
Would it be too much to ask our japanese partner to save out files for us so that I can set up a translator?
If they are drawing to scale in model space (which is strange and bad - but not unknown) then they will either have to change their practice (and probably learn to use paper space) or the files will need to be rescaled either by them or by you in AutoCAD or ArchiCAD. If it comes down to this you could probably set up an autolisp routine to speed up the process, but this seems quite a pain for an ongoing process. In this case they would also have problems with your DWGs at 1:1.

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‎2006-10-16 11:07 PM
DRAWING UNIT or DWGUNIT. It's in Autocad. Ask your Japanese friend what length this unit represents!
He/she must know, or they wouldn't be able to output anything meaningful from their Autocad. If they don't know, ask them to ask their reseller or the person who installed their Autocad.
Then post back and I'll tell you what to do!
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‎2006-10-17 06:40 PM
BTW, since you are in Stockholm, do you know my ArchiBud Stig Bengtssen? (He will attest that I'm not as stupid as I may sound.)
Thanks!
Mabe