drawoh
Mechanical
- Oct 1, 2002
- 8,959
Our old blueprint machine is on its last legs. At least it was on its last legs last week. A repairman is coming. 
All of our fabrication is subcontracted. We need to think about how we send drawings out.
I still prefer to send out scale drawings on paper, complete with signatures on the originals to indicate that everything is official. As the designer/drafter, I need to know how the end user is going to receive my stuff so that I can communicate clearly. I am routinely asked by fabricators for DXF files and other CAD formats. I send these too, as I am confident that these provide reliable scale information. I am not absolutely confident that a DXF file created by my CAD software will come up on the recipient's CAD softare exacly the way I saved it.
How do people here send drawings out to the shop, and ensure that this is the latest, official drawing?
JHG
All of our fabrication is subcontracted. We need to think about how we send drawings out.
I still prefer to send out scale drawings on paper, complete with signatures on the originals to indicate that everything is official. As the designer/drafter, I need to know how the end user is going to receive my stuff so that I can communicate clearly. I am routinely asked by fabricators for DXF files and other CAD formats. I send these too, as I am confident that these provide reliable scale information. I am not absolutely confident that a DXF file created by my CAD software will come up on the recipient's CAD softare exacly the way I saved it.
How do people here send drawings out to the shop, and ensure that this is the latest, official drawing?
JHG