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I've heard this before, but don't understand. If I'm drawing something that is N scale, then N scale is 100%. I usually have to draw at x48 N scale and then I use Netfabb to shrink it x48 down. Still a pain because I have to convert every single measurement from N scale to x48 N scale.If I took all of my scale drawings and sized them up to 1:1 scale that would be a large file.
Large file when drawn in 1:1 (prototype size)? Not at all.Can't you do the scaling within SketchUp?If you draw something in N scale then blow it up 16000% (to get it to prototype size), and save the file, it should not be appreciably larger in size than the original N scale drawing file.
Yes the files are the same size, no matter how big it's drawn. Yes you can scale with Sketchup For N scale it's 160%, not 16,000%
No what I mean about drawing 1:1 is I'm not drawing something that is 1:1. I'm drawing scale model trains.What is a 1:1 scale 7x16mm motor? It is 7x16mm that is it's full size.
I think .018" radius is the smallest Sketchup will do. So just a hair big for a #90 screw hole, but that will work because 3D printing grows the parts slightly.
If you want to take N scale drawing you need to scale it up to 16000% to make it prototype (1:1) scale. Scale is not the same as percentage.Example: if you have 1" long line in your drawing, to make it 5" long you enlarge it by 500%To make that 1" line 10" long, you enlarge it by 1000%To make it 100" long you enlarge it by 10000%
Pete I just scaled some N scale structure parts I'm working on for the laser. I drew them 1 to 1 and then scaled it by .00625 for N scale (I measure doorways to make sure they are .500" which is 80 scale inches) and then scaled it up by 160% and they came back out the size I drew them. So maybe it's not "%" that I'm using, but every other program (slicer for 3D printers) I use for scaling uses "%" and it comes out to 1 to 1 when enlarged by 160%.
Just about everything starts with a scale drawing. I had one on my desktop that was to HO scale. I just tried to resize it to 1:1 (x87) scale and the program (XnView) shut down. it took a 2011x1357 jpg and turned it into a 174722x117900 jpg. So just that alone...