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SOLVED!

Trying to explode a DWG External Drawing

RafaelMA
Booster
I have placed a DWG file as an External Drawing on my file and I'm trying to explode it so I have individual elements that can be read by the Magic Wand.

However, whenever I try it an Information Box appears saying that "Elements have been created and/or have changed their position on currently unseen Stories". None of the exploded elements can be found in any of the existing Stories, and I just have no idea where my elements are. All the layers are unlocked and visible.

I also tried Attaching the DWG as an X-Ref Drawing, but the file does not appear anywhere on my ARCHICAD file.

Any thoughts?
1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Accepted Solutions
Solution
Laszlo Nagy
Community Admin
Community Admin
Rafael,

It is caused by changed default Renovation Statuses of elements in AC23.
See the answer to this issue here:

https://archicad-talk.graphisoft.com/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=69419&p=308845#p308840
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6 REPLIES 6
Lingwisyer
Guru
You should not need to explode the DWG. Using the Drawing Tool just place the DWG on the desired Story or Worksheet.

Do not really have experience with the XRef tool, so I have not idea what is going on there...



Ling.

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Solution
Laszlo Nagy
Community Admin
Community Admin
Rafael,

It is caused by changed default Renovation Statuses of elements in AC23.
See the answer to this issue here:

https://archicad-talk.graphisoft.com/viewtopic.php?f=22&t=69419&p=308845#p308840
Loving Archicad since 1995 - Find Archicad Tips at x.com/laszlonagy
AMD Ryzen9 5900X CPU, 64 GB RAM 3600 MHz, Nvidia GTX 1060 6GB, 500 GB NVMe SSD
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bouhmidage
Advisor
Here Is my Advice ,
NEVER explode a DWG file, all embeded layers will be exploded too and make your layer settings a MESS

here is two solutions :
1 - if you really need to work with magic wand : open your DWG in autocad, and place all items in 1 layer, name it for exemple " FOR ARCHICAD", save , import it and explode, you'll get 1 extra layer, that you created , the " FOR ARCHICAD" layer, you can show your DWG and hide it easily

2 - if you're not planning to use magic want, Just an imported DWG for coparision or smthng else ; import your DWG, and in the drawing settings, there is a layer visibility icon, click on it and choose which layer you want to show and which one you want to hide

try to be organized and keep your file clean
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Barry Kelly
Moderator
bouhmidage wrote:
1 - if you really need to work with magic wand : open your DWG in autocad, and place all items in 1 layer, name it for exemple " FOR ARCHICAD", save , import it and explode, you'll get 1 extra layer, that you created , the " FOR ARCHICAD" layer, you can show your DWG and hide it easily

You can do that straight away in Archicad - no need to re-save file in Autocad.

When you explode the drawing you will be prompted with a dialogue box.
Choose "Use Drawings Layer" and all layers will be converted to the one layer that you originally placed the drawing in.

Barry.
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RafaelMA
Booster
Thank you for all the replies!!!
Marc H
Advisor
With so much focus on 3d, there does not appear to be as much attention to working with 2d imports. I work with a lot of DWG imports in my planning work, and I am pleased that AC provides several options for working with them:

If I only need the DWG for tracing and snapping, I find just dragging the DWG onto a worksheet (vs onto the floor plan) is a 'clean' way to work. Then, when I am anywhere in the model where I need it, I can right click on the worksheet in the Navigator and choose the 'Show As Trace Reference'. Its particularly useful if I'm modeling an existing structure from historical DWG and PDF files.

Other times, I want to simply include the entire 2d drawing in a published set in an as-is state (e.g., printing an existing condition drawing with the new project title block). I just drag the drawing onto the appropriate floor on a pre-set drawing layer, without exploding it. I then have that drawing layer visible for printing. (Alternately, here I may choose the x-ref option, if I think I will be frequently changing out the external DWGs with updated versions.)

Most often, though, I use the exploded option within the model. I find this option works well when I have access to fairly consistent drawings with rich content, but do not have the time to build an entire 3d model of a large existing building. For this application I want the 2d elements to substitute graphically like 3d objects (e.g., to produce 2d+3d drawings in color, apply renovation status, and so forth). To make that work, I start with a template which already contains a standard CAD layer set alongside my 3d set. Then, when I explode the drawing, I choose to embed the imported drawings layers and then delete the monolithic drawing I dragged in. I then go to my layer manager and move the 2d elements from non-standard layers to the standard layers. Once there, they will follow my LC and GORs, and I can apply all my AC settings. However, the clean-up can be a very quick or messy process, depending on the imported drawing quality, which is why many here discourage this option. It can be 10m to 30m per drawing, especially if it has a lot of rich content. Offsetting that, if I have several drawings from the same source (e.g., one drawing per floor plate), I can bring them all in, explode all, then use the layer manager to move elements once and the Find & Select tool to take care of the odd linework on each floor in turn, which speeds things along quite well.
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