need help

Discussion in 'AutoCAD' started by Kyle, Mar 13, 2007.

  1. Kyle

    Kyle Guest

    drafting in high school was easy but i started work today for a small
    engineering firm and the plans i was copying to autocad from paper
    were alot more confusing than tha high school ones. Does anyone have a
    site plan i could study to learn all of the symbols and how to read
    the dimensions. Any help would be greatly appriciated.
     
    Kyle, Mar 13, 2007
    #1
  2. Kyle

    doane_nut Guest

    First rule of employment:
    Understand the nature of the work you will be doing, unless of course you
    think you will find all the answers on a news group.
     
    doane_nut, Mar 16, 2007
    #2
  3. Kyle

    Troppo Guest

    Second rule of employment :
    Ask. And keep on asking.
    You don't say where your work is located, but in most countries there are
    established standards for technical drawing, and someone in your
    workplace will (or should) know what they are :)
    Standards usually cover plan dimensions (paper sizes), dimensioning of
    drawings, units, minimum lettering size, standard symbols, common
    abbreviations, what should be on title blocks etc.
    The stuff in your workplace may be personalised to the organisation, but
    should still comply with the standard.
     
    Troppo, Mar 16, 2007
    #3
  4. At my first CAD job, I had to sign a letter that said I was always going to
    comply with the extensive and well documented company cad standards manual.
    Still, I found many situation that the standards did not seem to cover, so I
    would ask the CAD priestess what I should do in EVERY one of these
    situations, no matter how small. I feared that I was risking being a PITA,
    but I signed this letter that said if I deviated from the protocol, I'd have
    to make it good on my own time. I figured if they were going to insist on
    having it a certain way, then they owed me an explanation of what they
    wanted.

    They soon came to the conclusion that I was not your typical CAD cowboy,
    which was the most common problem for them, and these were not stupid
    questions I was asking. I quickly earned their respect as a draftsman, and
    then as a CAD operator, and they soon even gave me special dispensation to
    modify their protocol on a complex job I was doing alone. I wanted to try
    this thing called "paperspace", as it seemed to have a bunch of advantages.

    If the OP is straight out of high school, it's safe to assume that they are
    not paying him to know everything already, and unless he's misrepresented
    himself to get the job, the employer should have to expect questions while
    such an inexperience pup gets up to speed. Ask away!
     
    Michael Bulatovich, Mar 16, 2007
    #4
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