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------------------------------------------- Harry Wright AIA Associate Costanza Spector Clauser Architects, PC Moorestown NJ ------------------------------------------- Autocad's print dialog has an option for scaling line weights. When you print hal;f size select this option and lineweights as well as text will be scaled by same factor as your reduction. Text is more legible, less lineweight bleed for text, parallel lines etc.
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------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 02-03-2012 10:35 From: Michael Jordan Subject: Affordable Wide Format Printer/Scanner
Paul,
I would recommend going to a different size. For the majority of my projects in the last 10 years we have been using 22x34 sheet that are 11x17 when half size. This lets just about any standard office copier/printer with tabloid size work and then you use the large format plotter for the full size. I know a few one man shop that do this and don't own a plotter, they send pdf files to the local print shop for full size only when needed for submittals. This is simular to what Steve has said but a more common office set-up verses a design setup.
------------------------------------------- Michael Jordan AIA Cyntergy AEC, LLC Tulsa OK -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 02-02-2012 06:10 From: Steven Brown Subject: Affordable Wide Format Printer/Scanner
I am a 2 person design build firm. For 99% of our drawings, we use a konica/minolta "bizhub" C280 with 12x18 paper. That is exactly 50% of 24x36 and I plot all 24x36 drawings at 50%. The prints are scalable, very fast to print full sets (with CAD, drawings change pretty much every day) and cheap. You have to size some text etc a little large on the originals, knowing you'lll be looking at them at half size. The sets are small & handy enough that contractors actually look at them. My HP500 plotter has been sitting idle for years. We have a few institutional clients that want full sized sets (at first) and we send them out to printers - then I wean them off into 12x18 sets. No sense being in the printing biz. ------------------------------------------- Steven Brown DesignBuild LLC Broomall PA -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 02-01-2012 10:42 From: Robert Silarski Subject: Affordable Wide Format Printer/Scanner
We've used an HP DesignJet 110plus NR since 2006--and we use it a lot. It does color, does not scan and has not given us more than ten minutes of trouble in all that time. We still send out large drawings to be scanned.
------------------------------------------- Robert Silarski AIA Principal S&Co.'Architecture+Design Nyack NY -------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 01-31-2012 10:06 From: Paul Brown Subject: Affordable Wide Format Printer/Scanner
Hi Group: My first time posting. Just launching my own independent practice for the first time at the ripe young age of 55. I'm searching for an affordable 24" wide roll printer and scanner. Can some of you tell me what make and model you use in your office? I would prefer color, but can go with B&W if it keeps the cost down. Perhaps a desktop model? Thanks, ------------------------------------------- Paul S. Brown, AIA Architect Needham, MA -------------------------------------------
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