Hi,
I just wanted to pass this on to you guys. I just stumbled on it and some of you may already know this feature.
I was fooling around in AutoCad today just curious about planning out moves on a rotary table by using CAD to rotate a drawing like a rotary table simulation. The drawing I was using had all the features dimensioned using the "ordinate" dimensioning option. For those not knowing this feature it means all points are in reference to x=0 and y=0 for the datum point.
Now although that's a very useful feature, it's not the trick I learned.
This is the main point of my post...When I rotated the drawing about it's center point (0,0)..."all the ordinate dimensions updated to reflect their new positions".
Now I don't know if that's going to be as useful as I think, but I think it will be, say to print several iterations of your project to replicate how you plan to machine a piece. Each printout...or if you have a PC near your mill, you can predict the x,y positions after you rotate the picture in CAD.
Well, that's the new thing I learned today by accident.
Rich
I just wanted to pass this on to you guys. I just stumbled on it and some of you may already know this feature.
I was fooling around in AutoCad today just curious about planning out moves on a rotary table by using CAD to rotate a drawing like a rotary table simulation. The drawing I was using had all the features dimensioned using the "ordinate" dimensioning option. For those not knowing this feature it means all points are in reference to x=0 and y=0 for the datum point.
Now although that's a very useful feature, it's not the trick I learned.
This is the main point of my post...When I rotated the drawing about it's center point (0,0)..."all the ordinate dimensions updated to reflect their new positions".
Now I don't know if that's going to be as useful as I think, but I think it will be, say to print several iterations of your project to replicate how you plan to machine a piece. Each printout...or if you have a PC near your mill, you can predict the x,y positions after you rotate the picture in CAD.
Well, that's the new thing I learned today by accident.
Rich