RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-28 Thread Jo Watkiss
I've been slow to acknowledge some great ideas and suggestions.  Thanks
everybody.
Currently grappling with the transition from FM6 on XP to FM9 on Win 7.
No doubt there will be more questions to follow... :)

Jo.

-Original Message-
From: Georg Eck [mailto:e...@squidds.de] 
Sent: 21 October 2010 06:28
To: Jo Watkiss; framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: AW: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

Hi Jo,

one of more solutions, following with e-drawings and Acrobat 8 or 9 Pro
Ext.:

1. Open Acrobat 8 Pro 3D or 9 Pro Ext.
2. Open the drawing with e-drawings, move it in the position you like
it.
3. Push PRTSC and the graphic from e-drawings will save in Acrobat, you
can save it as u3d in PDF.
4. Import this in your FrameMaker file.

Other way:
1. Open the Solidworks original file with Acrobat 8 Pro 3D Toolkit,
Acrobat 9 Pro Ext. 3D Previewer
or Take DEEP EXPLORATION from Right Hemisphere. 
2. Now you can reduce objects and save it as u3d.
2. Import this in your FrameMaker file.

Add-On: If you like to set links in FrameMaker to views and animations
in you u3d and to create a 3D PDF, then take 
SQUIDDS 3D Communication Package (www.squidds.de/en/3dpdf)

- Georg




Framers,  I know this is way off topic - but knowing how much knowledge
there is on here, I'm hoping somebody can point me to a good resource or
forum to help.

 

I'm trying to get vector images from Solidworks e-drawings into
FrameMaker and then to PDF.  However in the resulting PDF, the vectors
draw so slowly on the page that it is causing problems for our readers.



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RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-20 Thread Tim Lewis
This is another reason I request the .easm files configured for eDrawings. I
import the PDF into Adobe Illustrator and it comes in as vector art. I then
can change the line weights delete unwanted lines if needed, use the masks,
and add the other elements such as callouts. I did an entire parts manual
this way. This same client had some very large SolidWorks files that I could
not handle so I taught the engineer how to save the file as .easm, open in
eDrawings and then make the PDF. When I needed specific components or views,
I sat with him to get what I needed.

Tim Lewis
Lewis Technical Communications, Inc.
ltc.wri...@comcast.net


> -Original Message-
> From: Alison Craig [mailto:alison.cr...@ultrasonix.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, October 20, 2010 12:10 PM
> To: Tim Lewis; framers@lists.frameusers.com
> Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf
> 
> Tim:
> 
> What if you need to add "stuff" to the drawings, like I do? Can you do
that in the
> format you're describing?
> 
> The AI files I get from the Mechanical engineers do not contain Part
Numbers or
> tool descriptions (for Service personnel). I also change the colour of
some items
> so they stand out from the B&W line drawings as well as add arrows to
ensure the
> correct part is identified with its part name and number.
> 
> FYI: I got an e-mail from R&D yesterday. They were just at a SolidWorks
demo
> where they saw "3D Via Composer". I haven't done my homework yet, but
> apparently it would allow me to grab a view and do things to it then pull
it directly
> into FrameMaker. It also allows for HTML conversion and video creation:
> http://www.hawkridgesys.com/products/3dvia-composer/. The drawback is that
a
> single-seat server edition is $6,000.
> 
> Alison
> 
> Alison Craig, Technical Writer
> Ultrasonix Medical Corporation
> Tel: (604) 279-8550, ext 127
> E-mail: alison.cr...@ultrasonix.com
> 
> 
> 
> -Original Message-
> From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com [mailto:framers-
> boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Tim Lewis
> Sent: Tuesday, October 19, 2010 11:07 AM
> To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
> Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf
> 
> I like using the SolidWorks eDrawings and often prefer it because too many
times
> the engineers are either too busy to give me the drawings or the views I
need. It
> has been far easier to ask for .easm files that have been saved for
eDrawings.
> Then I open the file, rotate it to show what I need and hide those
elements that I do
> not need. Then I print the result to a PDF, which I can import into
Illustrator if
> needed.
> 
> Tim Lewis
> Lewis Technical Communications, Inc.
> ltc.wri...@comcast.net
> 
> > -Original Message-
> Jo:
> 
> According to my mechanical designer (Alex has been great - teaching me
about
> what I can do via AI with his SolidWorks stuff) there is pretty much
*zero* work
> involved for the engineers to Save As an AI file (or a DWG file if your
SoildWorks
> is older than the 2009 version) when they Save As to an EASM file.
> 
> Is there a company protocol that forbids saving as an AI or DWG?
> 
> If not, I highly suggest you try to get the engineer to spend an extra few
seconds
> getting you what the user/customer needs - maybe bribe him with some
doughnuts
> or muffins ;-)).
> 
> In the past, I've had to use non-vector SolidWorks images and *no one* has
been
> happy with the results.
> 
> Alison
> 
> From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com
> [mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Jo Watkiss
> Sent: Monday, October 18, 2010 2:28 AM
> To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
> Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf
> 
> Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.
> 
> We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is
> supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks eDrawings Viewer
to
> manipulate the model to get the illustration that we need.
> Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
> - which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.
> 
> 
> I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need
> as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would have another Solidworks
> licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In our imperfect world, we have
to make
> do with the eDrawing.
> 
> I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector
only when
> absolutely necessary.
> 
> Cheers,
> Jo
> 
> ___
> 
> 
> You are currently s

RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-20 Thread Alison Craig
Tim:

What if you need to add "stuff" to the drawings, like I do? Can you do that in 
the format you're describing?

The AI files I get from the Mechanical engineers do not contain Part Numbers or 
tool descriptions (for Service personnel). I also change the colour of some 
items so they stand out from the B&W line drawings as well as add arrows to 
ensure the correct part is identified with its part name and number.

FYI: I got an e-mail from R&D yesterday. They were just at a SolidWorks demo 
where they saw "3D Via Composer". I haven't done my homework yet, but 
apparently it would allow me to grab a view and do things to it then pull it 
directly into FrameMaker. It also allows for HTML conversion and video 
creation: http://www.hawkridgesys.com/products/3dvia-composer/. The drawback is 
that a single-seat server edition is $6,000.

Alison

Alison Craig, Technical Writer
Ultrasonix Medical Corporation
Tel: (604) 279-8550, ext 127
E-mail: alison.cr...@ultrasonix.com
 
 

-Original Message-
From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com 
[mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Tim Lewis
Sent: Tuesday, October 19, 2010 11:07 AM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

I like using the SolidWorks eDrawings and often prefer it because too many
times the engineers are either too busy to give me the drawings or the views
I need. It has been far easier to ask for .easm files that have been saved
for eDrawings. Then I open the file, rotate it to show what I need and hide
those elements that I do not need. Then I print the result to a PDF, which I
can import into Illustrator if needed. 

Tim Lewis
Lewis Technical Communications, Inc.
ltc.wri...@comcast.net

> -Original Message-
Jo:

According to my mechanical designer (Alex has been great - teaching me about
what I can do via AI with his SolidWorks stuff) there is pretty much *zero*
work involved for the engineers to Save As an AI file (or a DWG file if your
SoildWorks is older than the 2009 version) when they Save As to an EASM
file. 

Is there a company protocol that forbids saving as an AI or DWG? 

If not, I highly suggest you try to get the engineer to spend an extra few
seconds getting you what the user/customer needs - maybe bribe him with some
doughnuts or muffins ;-)). 

In the past, I've had to use non-vector SolidWorks images and *no one* has
been happy with the results.

Alison

From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com
[mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Jo Watkiss
Sent: Monday, October 18, 2010 2:28 AM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.

We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks eDrawings
Viewer to manipulate the model to get the illustration that we need.
Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
- which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.


I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would have
another Solidworks licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In our
imperfect world, we have to make do with the eDrawing.

I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector only
when absolutely necessary.

Cheers,
Jo

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RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-19 Thread Tim Lewis
I like using the SolidWorks eDrawings and often prefer it because too many
times the engineers are either too busy to give me the drawings or the views
I need. It has been far easier to ask for .easm files that have been saved
for eDrawings. Then I open the file, rotate it to show what I need and hide
those elements that I do not need. Then I print the result to a PDF, which I
can import into Illustrator if needed. 

Tim Lewis
Lewis Technical Communications, Inc.
ltc.wri...@comcast.net

> -Original Message-
Jo:

According to my mechanical designer (Alex has been great - teaching me about
what I can do via AI with his SolidWorks stuff) there is pretty much *zero*
work involved for the engineers to Save As an AI file (or a DWG file if your
SoildWorks is older than the 2009 version) when they Save As to an EASM
file. 

Is there a company protocol that forbids saving as an AI or DWG? 

If not, I highly suggest you try to get the engineer to spend an extra few
seconds getting you what the user/customer needs - maybe bribe him with some
doughnuts or muffins ;-)). 

In the past, I've had to use non-vector SolidWorks images and *no one* has
been happy with the results.

Alison

From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com
[mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Jo Watkiss
Sent: Monday, October 18, 2010 2:28 AM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.

We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks eDrawings
Viewer to manipulate the model to get the illustration that we need.
Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
- which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.


I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would have
another Solidworks licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In our
imperfect world, we have to make do with the eDrawing.

I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector only
when absolutely necessary.

Cheers,
Jo

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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-18 Thread Jim Owens
 For what it's worth, I worked with the Solidworks free viewer, and it 
seemed pretty powerful, although not very intuitive. After playing 
around with it for a couple of hours, I was able to create narrow 
sections to isolate the views I wanted.  From a single 3D Solidworks 
file, I was able to create front- and rear-view PDFs of different sizes 
(250 KB and 150 KB, respectively), so presumably some of the original 
elements were removed from the final vector files.


On 2010-10-18 13:19, Alison Craig wrote:

Jo:

According to my mechanical designer (Alex has been great - teaching me about 
what I can do via AI with his SolidWorks stuff) there is pretty much *zero* 
work involved for the engineers to Save As an AI file (or a DWG file if your 
SoildWorks is older than the 2009 version) when they Save As to an EASM file.

Is there a company protocol that forbids saving as an AI or DWG?

If not, I highly suggest you try to get the engineer to spend an extra few 
seconds getting you what the user/customer needs - maybe bribe him with some 
doughnuts or muffins ;-)).

In the past, I've had to use non-vector SolidWorks images and *no one* has been 
happy with the results.

Alison

Alison Craig, Technical Writer
Ultrasonix Medical Corporation
Tel: (604) 279-8550, ext 127
E-mail: alison.cr...@ultrasonix.com


-Original Message-
From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com 
[mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Jo Watkiss
Sent: Monday, October 18, 2010 2:28 AM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.

We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks
eDrawings Viewer to manipulate the model to get the illustration that we
need. Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
- which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.


I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would
have another Solidworks licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In
our imperfect world, we have to make do with the eDrawing.

I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector
only when absolutely necessary.

Cheers,
Jo







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RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-18 Thread Alison Craig
Jo:

According to my mechanical designer (Alex has been great - teaching me about 
what I can do via AI with his SolidWorks stuff) there is pretty much *zero* 
work involved for the engineers to Save As an AI file (or a DWG file if your 
SoildWorks is older than the 2009 version) when they Save As to an EASM file. 

Is there a company protocol that forbids saving as an AI or DWG? 

If not, I highly suggest you try to get the engineer to spend an extra few 
seconds getting you what the user/customer needs - maybe bribe him with some 
doughnuts or muffins ;-)). 

In the past, I've had to use non-vector SolidWorks images and *no one* has been 
happy with the results.

Alison

Alison Craig, Technical Writer
Ultrasonix Medical Corporation
Tel: (604) 279-8550, ext 127
E-mail: alison.cr...@ultrasonix.com


-Original Message-
From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com 
[mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Jo Watkiss
Sent: Monday, October 18, 2010 2:28 AM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.

We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks
eDrawings Viewer to manipulate the model to get the illustration that we
need. Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
- which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.


I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would
have another Solidworks licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In
our imperfect world, we have to make do with the eDrawing.

I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector
only when absolutely necessary.

Cheers,
Jo







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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-18 Thread Shmuel Wolfson
 See if there is an option in Corel to flatten the layers. I think 
Visio gives you this option.

That might increase the rendering speed in the PDF.

Regards,
Shmuel Wolfson
Technical Writer
052-763-7133


On 18-Oct-10 11:27 AM, Jo Watkiss wrote:

Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.

We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks
eDrawings Viewer to manipulate the model to get the illustration that we
need. Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
- which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.


I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would
have another Solidworks licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In
our imperfect world, we have to make do with the eDrawing.

I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector
only when absolutely necessary.

Cheers,
Jo







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RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-18 Thread Jo Watkiss
Thanks everybody for lots of advice and suggestions.

We don't have access to Solidworks itself, only the 3D e-drawing (.easm)
that is supplied by the project engineer. We use the Solidworks
eDrawings Viewer to manipulate the model to get the illustration that we
need. Unfortunately, if we want to export a vector, its 'all or nothing'
- which is probably why the resulting image renders so slowly on screen.


I agree that in a perfect world the engineer would create all the
illustrations we need as 2D PDFs directly from Solidworks; or we would
have another Solidworks licence so that we could do it ourselves.  In
our imperfect world, we have to make do with the eDrawing.

I've concluded its best to use a bitmap wherever possible, and a vector
only when absolutely necessary.

Cheers,
Jo







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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-17 Thread Shmuel Wolfson
 Try saving from the source program to DXF, opening it in Corel, saving 
as WMF, and importing the WMF into Frame using File>Import>File.


Regards,
Shmuel Wolfson
Technical Writer
052-763-7133


On 15-Oct-10 12:04 PM, Jo Watkiss wrote:

Framers,  I know this is way off topic - but knowing how much knowledge
there is on here, I'm hoping somebody can point me to a good resource or
forum to help.



I'm trying to get vector images from Solidworks e-drawings into
FrameMaker and then to PDF.  However in the resulting PDF, the vectors
draw so slowly on the page that it is causing problems for our readers.




The path we are taking is:

Print from e-drawings to .ps file

Open .ps file in CorelDraw and save as .eps (or .wmf or .pdf - the end
result is the same)

Import .eps into Frame and then make PDF as normal



I think the source of the problem is the original .ps files, because
they are so complex (some images have 38,000+ objects in them).



If anybody knows how I can achieve better results, or can direct me to a
more appropriate forum or user group, I'd be very grateful.



Thanks,

Jo Watkiss









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RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-15 Thread Alison Craig
Jo:

I am currently incorporating SolidWorks (2009) mechanical drawings into an 
unstructured FM 9 Service Manual. I have not yet created a PDF of the entire 
book, but a PDF of a sample drawing page, opens quite quickly.

This is my process:

"My" mechanical engineer creates the drawings from a full rendition of our 
product - which is massively complex and involves dozens of SolidWorks files. 
However, when he has completed the view I need, he saves it directly to a much 
simpler AI file. 

I use Illustrator and convert the AI to an EPS and add all the markings I need 
re: part numbers, tool types, etc. 

The original AI file is maybe 1MB in size (the final EPS is larger) and whether 
in AI or EPS format, it allows me to manipulate any line within the drawing (I 
believe this is a function of SolidWorks 2009. In earlier versions, the 
Mechanical engineer had to manipulate the drawing for me as it was not nearly 
as AI friendly).

I then import the finished EPS by reference into the file I want (each drawing 
is a separate file, although they are all part of the same Appendix in the 
Book).

So far, I have no complaints with performance when I open a single sample 
drawing saved to PDF, although I think my completed Service Manual PDF will 
likely end up being huge.

HTH, Alison

Alison Craig, Technical Writer
Ultrasonix Medical Corporation
Tel: (604) 279-8550, ext 127
E-mail: alison.cr...@ultrasonix.com
 
 
-Original Message-
From: framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com 
[mailto:framers-boun...@lists.frameusers.com] On Behalf Of Jo Watkiss
Sent: Friday, October 15, 2010 3:05 AM
To: framers@lists.frameusers.com
Subject: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

Framers,  I know this is way off topic - but knowing how much knowledge
there is on here, I'm hoping somebody can point me to a good resource or
forum to help.

 

I'm trying to get vector images from Solidworks e-drawings into
FrameMaker and then to PDF.  However in the resulting PDF, the vectors
draw so slowly on the page that it is causing problems for our readers.


 

The path we are taking is:

Print from e-drawings to .ps file

Open .ps file in CorelDraw and save as .eps (or .wmf or .pdf - the end
result is the same)

Import .eps into Frame and then make PDF as normal

 

I think the source of the problem is the original .ps files, because
they are so complex (some images have 38,000+ objects in them).

 

If anybody knows how I can achieve better results, or can direct me to a
more appropriate forum or user group, I'd be very grateful.

 

Thanks,

Jo Watkiss

 

 

 

 

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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-15 Thread Yves Barbion
Hi Jo

Indeed, I think the drawings are too complex to be rendered fast onscreen
(in PDF). I've had a similar problem a couple of years ago with an
Illustrator vector graphic which had A LOT of gradient fills.

We fixed the problem by saving the graphic as a pixel image (.png) instead
of a vector graphic.

Cheers


-- 
Yves Barbion
www.scripto.nu
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RE: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-15 Thread Rick Quatro
Hi Jo,

I would try a different path. Go directly from the drawing's .ps file to
PDF, then import the PDF into FrameMaker, then go to PDF from FrameMaker.
This may give you better results and it would avoid the unnecessary step of
using CorelDraw.

Rick Quatro
Carmen Publishing Inc.
585-659-8267
r...@frameexpert.com

*** Frame Automation blog at http://frameautomation.com



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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-15 Thread Jim Owens
 I had to bring in a Solidworks file for an illustration recently. I 
tried it a few ways. If I recall correctly, I ended up printing from 
Solidworks to Adobe PDF. In my case, I had to open the PDF in 
Illustrator for some edits and then save it again as PDF. Then I brought 
the PDF into the Frame doc.


I don't notice any delay when viewing a PDF of the document created from 
Frame, but  then I don't think the document is as complex. I used a 
section view of the 3D Solidworks object.


On 2010-10-15 06:04, Jo Watkiss wrote:

Framers,  I know this is way off topic - but knowing how much knowledge
there is on here, I'm hoping somebody can point me to a good resource or
forum to help.



I'm trying to get vector images from Solidworks e-drawings into
FrameMaker and then to PDF.  However in the resulting PDF, the vectors
draw so slowly on the page that it is causing problems for our readers.




The path we are taking is:

Print from e-drawings to .ps file

Open .ps file in CorelDraw and save as .eps (or .wmf or .pdf - the end
result is the same)

Import .eps into Frame and then make PDF as normal



I think the source of the problem is the original .ps files, because
they are so complex (some images have 38,000+ objects in them).



If anybody knows how I can achieve better results, or can direct me to a
more appropriate forum or user group, I'd be very grateful.



Thanks,

Jo Watkiss









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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-15 Thread Art Campbell
Sounds like the entire drawing is being converted (which with
thousands of components is a lot of layers), but you only really need
the skin or outer layer.

You'll probably have to have one of the CAD guys toggle that on or off
before they generate the PDF.

I'd also look on the Solidworks site for file viewers and browsers.
Most CAD outfits offer these for free, and many of them can generate a
PDF (if not automagically, by printing to the Acrobat printer, and
that's likely to be a version you can use.

Art

Art Campbell
               art.campb...@gmail.com
  "... In my opinion, there's nothing in this world beats a '52
Vincent and a redheaded girl." -- Richard Thompson
                                                      No disclaimers apply.
                                                               DoD 358



On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 7:34 AM, Writer  wrote:
>  I used to convert CAD drawings to PDF, and then import them into FM. It
> worked beautifully. You could try that.
>
> Nadine
>
> On 10/15/2010 6:04 AM, Jo Watkiss wrote:
>>
>> Framers,  I know this is way off topic - but knowing how much knowledge
>> there is on here, I'm hoping somebody can point me to a good resource or
>> forum to help.
>>
>>
>>
>> I'm trying to get vector images from Solidworks e-drawings into
>> FrameMaker and then to PDF.  However in the resulting PDF, the vectors
>> draw so slowly on the page that it is causing problems for our readers.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> The path we are taking is:
>>
>> Print from e-drawings to .ps file
>>
>> Open .ps file in CorelDraw and save as .eps (or .wmf or .pdf - the end
>> result is the same)
>>
>> Import .eps into Frame and then make PDF as normal
>>
>>
>>
>> I think the source of the problem is the original .ps files, because
>> they are so complex (some images have 38,000+ objects in them).
>>
>>
>>
>> If anybody knows how I can achieve better results, or can direct me to a
>> more appropriate forum or user group, I'd be very grateful.
>>
>>
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Jo Watkiss
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>>
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>> framers-unsubscr...@lists.frameusers.com
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Re: off topic: e-drawings, eps files, frame and pdf

2010-10-15 Thread Writer
 I used to convert CAD drawings to PDF, and then import them into FM. 
It worked beautifully. You could try that.


Nadine

On 10/15/2010 6:04 AM, Jo Watkiss wrote:

Framers,  I know this is way off topic - but knowing how much knowledge
there is on here, I'm hoping somebody can point me to a good resource or
forum to help.



I'm trying to get vector images from Solidworks e-drawings into
FrameMaker and then to PDF.  However in the resulting PDF, the vectors
draw so slowly on the page that it is causing problems for our readers.




The path we are taking is:

Print from e-drawings to .ps file

Open .ps file in CorelDraw and save as .eps (or .wmf or .pdf - the end
result is the same)

Import .eps into Frame and then make PDF as normal



I think the source of the problem is the original .ps files, because
they are so complex (some images have 38,000+ objects in them).



If anybody knows how I can achieve better results, or can direct me to a
more appropriate forum or user group, I'd be very grateful.



Thanks,

Jo Watkiss









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