I have been having problems with my limits, in other words, I set a particular limit for a completely different project a few months ago but after that I started a new project and I realized that whenever i set a limit it is the same limit that i set for the previous project, that is been used automatically by AutoCAD. However ammo try doing that and see what happens.
The answer is definitely not A and please do not ever attempt to turn off an electricity supply if someone is being electrocuted. The source might be live and you might electrocute yourself as well. Also these answers are from the CXC specimen paper.
@@mr.cargill im sorry i was just raging at autocad because im srupid changing the linetypescale did work but i had to chang it to q rly weird value to make it visible
The ridge is shown and this is a simple hip roof so there are no valleys. Here is a link to a video that explains how to draw the ridge details ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-_0IhHzolKhU.htmlsi=1CsWl5glDBAF448m
Hey thanks! This is a very common ongoing issue perhaps many drafting students face. I used to bother myself with LTSCALE and thinking there was a buried command toggle switch telling the linetype to show or not. Just grab the end of the line, drag it as long as you can, and then scale it down when you see the linetype showing.
That's an awesome easy way. I am just curious, how accurate is that parabola? The specified points should be correct, but the spline curve automatically chosen by AutoCAD BETWEEN the points are not exactly parabolic necessarily?
Good day Charles for this method of parabola construction the main focus is on the steps that are used to construct the parabola. Once the steps are correct then the spline in AutoCAD will give you a fairly accurate parabola. To get the parabola to be more accurate you can use more division lines between the axial length and span so you get more points.