I've done a scale vector drawing in Corel Draw of a possible guitar i want to build or rather have built and was wondering if there is a way to import or convert it into Autocad and retain it's scale and or zero point and be a functionable 2d cad drawing for a cnc to read and interpret correctly.
I'm a little unsure of how it works.
It should be drawn to scale within about a 1000'nth of an inch if all went right, but i was a little confused. At first i was just working in photoshop and had calculated the ppi of the document with regards to the actual ppi of my monitor, so that an inch on a ruler in photoshop with a new document actually measures and inch on my screen with a real ruler - i thought you had to do that to get things to print proper size that you are shooting for?
It turns out as close as i can visually get at 93.6 ppi. Then i was assuming when i print it at that ppi it should print to actual scale.
When i went to draw from scratch again in Corel as a vector drawing, i set the ppi at 93.6, but Corel automatically rounds the Document ppi up to 94 ppi. I didn't realize that till later. So since i was working off the ruler in Corel i guess i should just print it at 94 ppi?
I don't have any experience with print, it's a little confusing monitor ppi, document ppi ect... or maybe i'm over thinking it, but i would be taking it to Kinkos or wherever that has a big ass printer to get it on one sheet.
Secondly, I also would like to have it in a cad file that a cnc could read properly. I can export the drawing as a DXF or DWG from Corel. But i don't know if there is something special that has to be taken into consideration when beginning the document in the first place or before exporting or when importing to Autocad that would keep it's scale ect.
Or if i'm just severely confused about cad and cnc and what it needs to be to work, lol.
Thanks
I'm a little unsure of how it works.
It should be drawn to scale within about a 1000'nth of an inch if all went right, but i was a little confused. At first i was just working in photoshop and had calculated the ppi of the document with regards to the actual ppi of my monitor, so that an inch on a ruler in photoshop with a new document actually measures and inch on my screen with a real ruler - i thought you had to do that to get things to print proper size that you are shooting for?
It turns out as close as i can visually get at 93.6 ppi. Then i was assuming when i print it at that ppi it should print to actual scale.
When i went to draw from scratch again in Corel as a vector drawing, i set the ppi at 93.6, but Corel automatically rounds the Document ppi up to 94 ppi. I didn't realize that till later. So since i was working off the ruler in Corel i guess i should just print it at 94 ppi?
I don't have any experience with print, it's a little confusing monitor ppi, document ppi ect... or maybe i'm over thinking it, but i would be taking it to Kinkos or wherever that has a big ass printer to get it on one sheet.
Secondly, I also would like to have it in a cad file that a cnc could read properly. I can export the drawing as a DXF or DWG from Corel. But i don't know if there is something special that has to be taken into consideration when beginning the document in the first place or before exporting or when importing to Autocad that would keep it's scale ect.
Or if i'm just severely confused about cad and cnc and what it needs to be to work, lol.
Thanks
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