![]() ![]() Keep It Simple Stupid is the acronym I use consistently now. As most of my customers don't use Autocad drafters - the product is something they can print consistently for a highly readable document. This lost a lot of the original look to the drawings - but the PDF came out very dark and easily readable. I am using an Adobe PDF.pc3 printer driver. The text looks perfectly fine in model/paper space but turns our fuzzy/blurry when plotting. I also had to turn off the line weight plotting. I am getting fuzzy text when I plot from AutoCAD 2010 to PDF. ![]() There was no shade plot settings or transparency settings. To solve the problems I was having, I ended up putting all objects on a single layer, changing text styles to one, and colors as well. With all the multitude of ways to change settings in Autocad it becomes overwhelming when dealing with outside designers and vendors who do things differently to achieve a similar result in there drawing products. In the end, I try to simplify all my settings for consistency. Is there a Priority of overrides when it comes to these settings? I have played around with line weights and transparency settings in model space and paper space and tried ACAD.CTB, None and Monochrome.CTB, none of which seem to make any difference. It seems that there is an Autocad hierarchy in the layers controls - it seems to conflict with the plot style settings in certain ways that I don't fully understand. My issue is that lines in some layers of a drawing plot very light when plotted using the Autocad PDF printer.
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