Hi. This plan was too simple to fail - but it failed. The charity whose project
this is needed a large (that is... massive) paper wall map on which to plot and
rethink its delivery driver assignments. Both drivers and delivery addresses
are subject to change from week to week but it's not a pizza delivery; this is
a regular run to supply people in a bad way. So the plan was to print the base
map (roads and road names and county boundaries only) and then print 8.5 x 11
address maps with parcel data and orthos. That way, the base maps don't change
but the physical parcel layer is flexible. (On top of that is a third paper
layer indicating which drivers go where so someone can stand back and take in
the whole picture graphically. Not a cutting-edge state of the digital art
solution, but not everyone is cut out for that. It is what it is.) In order for
this to work, the parcel maps have to be the same scale as the base map. Which
they were... in QGIS.
We have to convert all the maps to PDF to print them, and we had to send the
base map PDFs to FedEx/Kinkos to print the 9 map grid panels at 42" by 62"
each.
When we got the big base maps up on the wall, we discovered the scale did not
match the 8.5" x 11" parcel maps output to PDF and printed from home. It's not
off by a lot, but it's enough to be painfully obvious from a single standard
size sheet of paper. I don't know how to reverse engineer the big map scale
precisely enough to enter a new scale number in the QGIS Print Layout. I didn't
foresee it because this never would've been a conceivable scenario at the
engineering firm where I picked up my meager GIS skills. (ArcMap sent a map
directly to the plotter without interim steps.) There was no scale bar on the
map. It shouldn't have been needed for this.
Did something happen to the map scale when QGIS output the map to PDF? Could
the size of the image on the pdf page have been adjusted manually or otherwise
when being sent to a plotter with 42" paper? Could the image have been
distorted horizontally differently from vertically? For the life of me, I
cannot trial-and-error guess at a scale to enter. I've gone through dozens of
new 8.5" x 11" test maps trying to guess the correct scale.
Any ideas?
Thank you all -
John A.
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