Mastering AutoCAD 2005 and AutoCAD LT 2005

Tracing with a digitizing tablet is the easiest way to enter a hand-drafted drawing into AutoCAD, but a traced drawing usually requires some cleaning up and reorganization. If dimensional accuracy is not too important, tracing is the best way to enter existing drawings into AutoCAD. It is especially useful for drawings that contain irregular curves, such as the contour lines of a topo- graphical map.

Tip  

Even if you don't plan to trace drawings into AutoCAD, read the following section on tracing because some of the information presented here will help you with everyday editing tasks .

Scaling a drawing is the most flexible method because you don't need a tablet to do it and, generally , you are faced with less cleanup afterward. Scaling also facilitates the most accurate input of orthogonal lines because you can read dimensions directly from the drawing and enter them into

AutoCAD. The main drawback with scaling is that if the drawing does not contain complete dimensional information, you must constantly look at the hand-drafted drawing and measure distances with a scale. Also, irregular curves are difficult to scale accurately.

 ACAD only      Scanning offers some unique opportunities with AutoCAD 2005, especially if you have a lot of RAM and a fast hard disk. Potentially, you can scan a drawing, save it on your computer as an image file, import the image into AutoCAD, and then trace over it. You still need to perform some cleanup work on the traced drawing, but because you can see your tracing directly on your screen, you have better control, and you won't have quite as much cleaning up to do as you do when tracing from a digitizer .

Programs are available that automatically convert an image file into a vector file of lines and arcs. These programs might offer some help, but they require the most cleaning up of the options presented here. Like tracing, scanning is best used for drawings that are difficult to scale, such as complex topographical maps containing more contours than are practical to trace on a digitizer, or nontechnical line art, such as letterhead and logos.

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