Some advice for a beginner

Please forgive me if this is silly question but I am completely new to Qcad and CAD drawings for that matter the last time I produce a drawing was with paper and pen on the drawing board.

I am producing architectural drawings so scaling them at 1:50 or 1:100.

There are a few things which are still bugging me:

  1. line types - if I select a different line type to continuous such as the centreline or.construction line I just see a continuous line it’s never showing the correct spacing.

  2. every time I dimension a drawing it’s too small to see and I have to adjust the sizing in the preferences is anyway to fix this as I’m always using scale drawings so be good to be to set some defaults.

  3. I think of worked out how to have a title block in the library and then import it into the drawing as a block. If am working at a scale of say 1 to 50 and then have to resize it by 50. I’m okay with this and it works fine. What do I do if I need to change the scale to 1:75?

I’m sure there are many other tips and tricks which would help you produce architectural drawings at the scale. Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

Operating system: Windows 10
Qcad pro

Hello jsm25 - welcome to the forum.

Excellent! That means you already know the drawing basics … :wink:

Below Menu / View is a command called “Screenbased Linetypes”. Is that activated?

You can preset the text hight below Edit / Drawing preferences / Dimension: Dimension Settings
If you work in Metric / mm you can put in 3.5 what means that a 1:1 scaled print has a 3.5 mm Dimension text hight.
If you intent to scale your printing to 1:50 or 1:75 then this value has to be 50 or 75 times bigger = 3.5x50 or 3.5x75.

Note: Your drawing should always be drawn in 1:1! Scaling of the drawing is part of the print job!
Your title block / frame should also be drawn and saved in 1:1. Scaling is then part of the insert task regarding to the intended print scale!
e.g. you will print your drawing in 1:50 then you have to insert the title block 50 times bigger …

Thank you so much for your very comprehensive answers it’s really got me working and I am enjoying using qcad. I’m sure I’ve got lots more to learn keep posting.

Thank you again for your assistance