CWSProgrammer
Mechanical
- Sep 30, 2004
- 35
Can anyone give me a walkthrough of how to convert an AutoCAD 2004 block (which functions as our corporate border for our drawings) to a format that can then be used in Solidworks 2006 SP0.0?
I have run several different variations of this question through Google and other search engines and found only one result that didn't require a paid registration. Except that one was not very detailed or well written enough to follow. It basically said that I was to save the border (with all elements on the same layer, fully exploded) to a regular drawing file, open it in Solid Works and go through the wizard to import it as a Sheet Format, then save it again and that would result in having the border I need.
However, when I go through all that, I consistently end up with a blank view when I attempt to open the saved border in a drawing as the sheet format.
So, either I'm doing something hideously wrong here or the above mentioned method is not how to do it.
In any case, is there anyone here that can help me out?
The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false-face for the urge to rule it. -- H.L. Mencken
I have run several different variations of this question through Google and other search engines and found only one result that didn't require a paid registration. Except that one was not very detailed or well written enough to follow. It basically said that I was to save the border (with all elements on the same layer, fully exploded) to a regular drawing file, open it in Solid Works and go through the wizard to import it as a Sheet Format, then save it again and that would result in having the border I need.
However, when I go through all that, I consistently end up with a blank view when I attempt to open the saved border in a drawing as the sheet format.
So, either I'm doing something hideously wrong here or the above mentioned method is not how to do it.
In any case, is there anyone here that can help me out?
The urge to save humanity is almost always only a false-face for the urge to rule it. -- H.L. Mencken