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This course is the second in a series of
three courses suitable for students of electrical drafting who wish
to develop an in-depth understanding of AutoCAD/IntelliCAD software. It
is part of a series of courses comprising the following:
Important: You
must have a copy of either IntelliCAD or AutoCAD installed on the
computer that you are using so that you can switch to
the CAD application and complete training exercises. It really should be
a 'proper' version of the software, not the trial version suggested in
Electrical CAD 1. You need a
copy of the software which will enable you to save the work that you do.
Either IntelliCAD® or AutoCAD® software
can be used for instruction since they are command compatible.
We assume that you have
completed Design Cad's
Electrical CAD 1 course prior to
enrolling in this course. This is important, because
this course depends heavily on
many of the concepts
illustrated earlier in Electrical CAD 1.
In this course, we will build on
your knowledge of CAD which you gained from our Electrical CAD 1 course.
As you will recall, the earlier course concentrated
on the overall CAD process and no
comprehensive detail on individual CAD commands was provided. We certainly did not
explore various options available within individual commands. So, in this course, we want to take the
opposite tack and provide you with an 'in-depth' look at
CAD exploring most of the individual CAD commands in some detail.
So, we aim to provide you
with:
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A
thorough understanding of the individual AutoCAD/IntelliCAD commands used to create CAD
drawings.
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An
explanation about why
a particular command is used and make suggestions for the selection of
commands appropriate for particular drafting functions.
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The
confidence needed to build a complete drawing of the type produced
in your normal working day.
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Advice
on the appropriate strategy for creating and maintaining drawings
within projects.
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The
tools necessary to construct drawings to AS1100 drafting standard.
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An
appreciation of the productivity gains which can be generated ‘down
the track’ by customizing and automating your CAD software.
A word of warning - we will build your
knowledge up slowly and build a firm base for your future work. You will
not begin serious drawing until the second module. Please be patient!
Please work though each module
in turn as (we hope you see) there is a logical progression.
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Drawing Full
Size |
Modelling the real world -
the importance of recognizing that when you create a CAD
drawing, you are drawing full size. In Australia we work in mm
when producing electrical schematics. Using various enquiry
commands to reveal information 'hidden' in the drawing database.
DISTANCE, ID, AREA and LIST commands. Examining
a typical electrical symbol and checking the LIMITS value and
the setting for the base point of the drawing. |
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The drawing interface |
Revisiting the AutoCAD and
IntelliCAD drawing interface. Using toolbars,
drop down menus and toolbars. Customizing the pull down menu area, adding a new
drop down menu
with cascading menu items. Managing multiple
drawings - switching from drawing to drawing. Examining various toolbar items. Using the Property Painter. Importing raster images,
tracing over scanned images. Creating a company logo using
primitive elements. Using keyboard shortcuts and function keys.
Developing a keys drawing which can be used to access function
keys. Applying text and using some of the text justification
tools. Building an A1 sheet incorporating a company logo to AS1100 standard. |
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Entity Snaps |
Placing entities in drawings
using software aids. Using the OSNAP command with its
various options - the Mid,
Int,
Node, Per, End, Qua, Cen
entity snap options. Using handles and grips to edit entities. |
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Manipulating
Selection Sets |
Understanding selection sets.
Picking entities.
Experimenting with various methods of creating selection
sets. The wp, oc, f, po, and all options of the
SELECT command. Selecting and operating on
groups of entities according to their properties. |
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Draw 1
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Reviewing the basic system
for entering commands. Transparent commands. Surveying the
available
methods of point data entry - Cartesian coordinates, polar
coordinates, relative polar coordinates, 3D coordinates,
cylindrical coordinates. The DRAWORDER command.
Surveyor's units. A close examination of the commands used to place
drawing primitives in a drawing. LINE,
PLINE, (widths, tapering, curve fitting etc.)
ARC (3 point, Start, Center, Angle etc.), the
CIRCLE command.
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Draw 2 |
A continuation of the various
DRAW commands - SPLINE, ELLIPSE,
POINT, RECTANGLE, POLYGON, DONUT, PLANE (TRACE),
ELLIPTICAL ARC, FREEHAND (SKETCH), DONUT etc. |
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Draw 3
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Using tracking in AutoCAD.
Surveyor's units,
The DLINE command, using ORTHO,
loading a linetype file, setting
LINETYPE, linetype scales - LTSCALE,
HATCHing areas, using the BHATCH command,
hatch pattern files. XLINES and RAYS.
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Viewing Skills
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Improving your knowledge of the view group of
commands. Creating named views when working in large drawings. Controlling your view of a CAD
drawing using various options available under the ZOOM,
PAN, HIDE, VPOINT, REGEN
and REDRAW commands. The importance of the UCSICON, the UCS
and DVIEW
commands. Using DVIEW and the Twist options to rotate and align
2D drawing. The use of Paper Space and Model Space. Using stored
views to advantage in laying out presentation drawings. Loading and manipulating external
references. Importing and exporting DXF files. Some comments
about 3D coordinates and the Z direction. SHADE, HIDE and
RENDERING. The ZOOM options - n, nX, nXp etc.
Accurate scaling in floating viewports. The visibility of
linetypes on layers. Using VPORTS in tiled model space,
storing and manipulating views.
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Preliminaries
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Using Windows Explorer or
Your Computer to make some
project folders and sub folders ready for managing projects.
Copying sample files from an exercises folder. Tuning your
computer for CAD software. Installing IntelliCAD/AutoCAD. Adjusting the CAD environment for smooth
working. Setting a default (prototype) drawing suitable for you work.
Locating prototype drawings in various versions of AutoCAD.
Adjusting limits, snap, linetype, dimensioning styles in the
prototype drawing. Setting some important variables using the UNITS command. Copying
iso3098b.shx font files so that lettering meets
AS1100 standard.
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The Electrical CAD 2 course is a full day course
and runs on demand. It is a group or one-on-one course although
we will take several students at a time if you come from
the same company (and discipline). We do not publish a
schedule of course dates and simply book you in at a
convenient time. If you wish to enrol for an
in-house course,
please send an email
to
info@designcad.com.au and we will reply with some
possible dates.
The cost
of the course for in-house training is $A750.00 per
day and includes GST. We can take up to three students
in our design studio at that price.
We
will invoice you after the day and encourage payment by direct deposit to our bank. The
details of our account will be on the invoice which we
will provide after the course has been delivered. If you
cannot attend after booking a course, there is no
penalty, we will simply re-schedule.
If you wish to pay by credit card, you
can do so via
PayPal, an organization which takes all credit cards
using a secure Internet facility. PayPal is a partner
within the eBay system. We have chosen PayPal because it
is independent of us, allows us to hold money in trust
until we have delivered the course and is now
operational in Australia.
This course can be taken by distance learning using
CD-ROM at a
considerable discount - $A285.00.
We ship a printed workbook and CD-ROM
containing a large collection of these instructional
movies. Together they enable you to learn to use the
software. We provide email support while you
work though the course.
Here is a link to
background material on the way our distance courses
work.
If your company or
organization is paying for the course, all we need is a
purchase order and an address to send the course
materials. If you are taking the course as a private
student, we want you to pay in advance and encourage payment via
PayPal, an
organization which takes all credit cards using a secure
Internet facility. PayPal is a partner within the eBay
system. We have chosen PayPal because it is independent
of us, allows us to hold money in trust until we have
delivered the course and is now operational in
Australia.
This course can also be taken by broadband learning at an
even
lower cost -A$250.00. Click
here to visit our
broadband learning site.
When taken in-house, Electrical CAD
1 normally runs over a full day session.
When taken
externally, experience has shown us that students take
significantly longer to complete the course, primarily
because they are able to break up their learning into
small 'chunks' as time permits. AutoCAD and IntelliCAD
are large
programs - please allow plenty of time to work through
our materials. We would estimate that you have 40-50
hours of work in front of you!
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Please enrol in Electrical CAD
3
where we cover editing entities, assigning attributes to blocks, plotting & printing
from paper space etc.
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