I'm glad someone else actually made that suggestion.  I hope they're a happy user.  I was going to suggest going to PDF via Plot Station / Plot Manager.  We can handle your CAD files in most common formats and output them as pretty much anything you need, including PDF.  We might even be able to improve your work flow in the process if you have a need for accounting, reuseable plot sets, and lots of other things. 

If you can send me some sample files I'd be happy to run them to compare with what you're getting now.


At 10:38 AM 7/26/2003 +0300, you wrote:
Kathy



 
www.equorum.com Plot Station
and get the input format tiff and dwg and even hpgl  and the out put will be PDF ; the submitting of files will be in patch mode or single as you like .
 
Ahmed
 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Kathy Tadlock
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, July 26, 2003 1:33 AM
Subject: [PDF] AutoCad questions

I'm asking these questions on behalf of the architects at the university.

They are currently using AutoCad 2000-I and have recently upgraded to Acrobat Pro 6.0 to create PDF's from AutoCad. They would like to create an efficient process for converting all hard copy architectural drawings and AutoCad files to PDF files available on a web page. On first try they are experiencing these problems and questions:

The PDF file created from AutoCad in Acrobat 6.0 using the Standard plot setting is about 3.4 MB. The original AutoCad file was about 1.05 MB and the three linked photos were about 1.2 MB. Why is the PDF file larger than the original file? Why is the PDF so big no matter what plot setting is selected?

Is there something unusual about solids or solid hatch patterns? One Autocad file keeps locking up and crashing Acrobat at a section with a solid hatch pattern.

Do they need to upgrade AutoCad 2000-I to be compatible with Acrobat 6.0?

Is there a resource for AutoCad users to look at for recommendations/descriptions of PDF plot settings?

Coming from a printing perspective, I'm having trouble answering their questions.

Kathy Tadlock
Support Services, Publishing Services
Wilson Library 564
M.S. 9058
(360)650-3545
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Whom computers would destroy, they must first drive mad.
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Melvin Backus
Primary Wizard
Sleepy Dragon Technical Services
www.sleepydragon.net

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