How do I change the scale of a plot in AutoCAD?

What is plot scale in AutoCAD?

From model space, you can establish the scale in the Plot dialog box. This scale represents a ratio of plotted units to the world-size units you used to draw the model. In a layout, you work with two scales. The first affects the overall layout of the drawing, which usually is scaled 1:1, based on the paper size.

How do I resize a scale in AutoCAD?

Start the scaling command with SC (or SCALE). Make a selection for the objects that need to be included in the scaling operation. Click in the drawing for the first point of the scaling base (base point). Type R to activate Reference scaling.

What is the plot scale?

This scale represents a ratio of plotted units to the world-size units you used to draw the model. In a layout, you work with two scales. The first affects the overall layout of the drawing, which usually is scaled 1:1, based on the paper size.

How do I find the scale of a plot in AutoCAD?

Scale a Drawing to Fit the Page

  1. Click Output tab Plot panel Plot. Find.
  2. In the Plot dialog box, under Plot Scale, select the Fit to Paper option. The resulting scale is automatically calculated. The ratio of plotted units to drawing units in the custom scale boxes is displayed.
  3. Click OK to plot the drawing.
IT IS INTERESTING:  How do you convert mm to m in AutoCAD?

How do you calculate scale?

To scale an object to a smaller size, you simply divide each dimension by the required scale factor. For example, if you would like to apply a scale factor of 1:6 and the length of the item is 60 cm, you simply divide 60 / 6 = 10 cm to get the new dimension.

How can I plot a drawing at scale 1 100 or 1 200 correctly in CAD?

First draw a rectangle the size of your paper minus the margins required. For scale of 1:100 use the SCALE command to scale the rectangle 100 times. Put this rectangle around what you want to plot then plot using Window and select the corners of the rectangle. Use scale to fit for the scaling and print it out.

Special Project