Printing Line Weights

I am finding that Bricscad prints lines heavier than ACAD LT & Progecad (for the same settings). Is there a quick fix?

Welcome!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.

Comments

  • It looks like I am the only one having this problem

  • I haven't had any program to compare with for a long time, but my prints seem to be what I expect for any given line thickness.

    I only use colours to dictate printed line thicknesses, not actual line weights or polylines as a rule.

    I was using a Dotted linetype to make polylines of varying thicknesses to represent flexible duct of different diameters, but the result (thickness of the dots, which elongated into ribs) varied over a few Bcad revisions and I stopped doing it.

    There was some manipulation within the program to change the printed outcome in similar instances, but I never heard of similar for straight out lines.

  • I also only use colours to dictate printed line thickness. All entities are drawn at the default line thickness of 0 mm. Layer line weight is set to 0 mm.

    Horizontal line weight prints out thinner than vertical lines

  • I did a print earlier with a piece of a PDF I had produced, just now I did one of the same area of that dwg direct to the same printer and there is no difference.

    It happens to have a 0.5mm line very close to a .25 hidden line in both hor and vert - the ink in the plane the print head travels spreads slightly so they merge in that direction, but I can't generally discern a difference between directions. I use .18 pen thickness as thinnest and can't imagine a thinner pen actually working in the "good old days" by hand.

    I seem to remember at one time encountering pen thicknesses confused  between inches and mm's in the print settings, but the result was pretty obvious.

    Other than that, could it be a plot style table you think you have set but is not actually being used by Bcad to print? (just guessing at possibilities)

This discussion has been closed.

Welcome!

It looks like you're new here. Sign in or register to get started.