#AUTODESK VIEWER PRINT ACTUAL SIZE SOFTWARE#
Automate printing a large number of documents created by AutoCAD, SolidWorks, and other CAD software all in batch mode. I could then print this out and measure it with a set of calipers to see if it was acurate - this is where the patience comes in because my drawings were always a little too out of scale (like the issue you're having with F360) but the beauty of using editing software was that I could rescale it and reprint until the drawing was right on the money. Print Conductor allows you to batch print or plot a series of DWG or DXF files to selected printers or plotters. Then, using the snipping tool in Windows, I would select the area of the canvas and copy it over to photo editing software (I used GIMP) and rescale the copied image to the same dimensions as a sheet of A4 So the way I did this was I would view the single part on the drawing canvas for this example I'd place one bulkhead on an A4 canvas in landscape. I needed to add them to some HDPE to make parts, I assume this is similar to what you're doing? Follow the detailed instructions below to print your patterns. I had some issues a while ago where F360 would crash when trying to output 2D profile drawings. Usually you will need to set up just a few options, but if you want to get maximum functionality from the Autodesk DWF Viewer, please refer to its help file by clicking the 'help' button.
Now, this a little bodgy but I have managed to cheese it in such a way that it CAN work with a little bit of persistance and patience. If these steps work for you, I'd suggest making Windows Photo Viewer your default program to open pictures if you're wanting to scale often. File>Print>Options>Printer Properties>Effects>scale as needed.
#AUTODESK VIEWER PRINT ACTUAL SIZE WINDOWS 10#
I've just looked and holy smokes, you're correct. Name MIME type Compressed Size Raw size thumbnail.jpg image/jpeg False 0x1e5ca 0x1e5ca sky.dat image/derp True 0x127a8e 0x200000 mesh0.dat model/mset False 0x43230 0x43230 mesh1.dat model/mset False 0xd86c 0xd86c mat0c.jpg image/jpeg False 0x2c055 0x2c055 mat0r.jpg image/jpeg False 0xbc42 0xbc42 mat0n. If you open the photo in Windows Photo Viewer (instead of the Windows 10 Photo app), you can scale within the printer properties.