Just curious what the 'standard' is where you are.
I assume 11 x 17 (or A3 for ISO people) is standard, but I could be wrong.
My shop was using 24 x 36 drawings and printing them on a roll. This is extremely cumbersome for electrical drawings - especially when there are 20+ sheets to a set. I get it - the drawings are 'designed' on a 24 x 36 sheet of paper, but we shouldn't have to print them that large!
I have advocated for printing them to 11 x 17 sheets for the panel shop and assembly drawings and requiring text to be no smaller than 0.125" on a D size sheet. This saves an incredible amount of time in the printing process and are much easier to handle.
Appreciate the input.
I assume 11 x 17 (or A3 for ISO people) is standard, but I could be wrong.
My shop was using 24 x 36 drawings and printing them on a roll. This is extremely cumbersome for electrical drawings - especially when there are 20+ sheets to a set. I get it - the drawings are 'designed' on a 24 x 36 sheet of paper, but we shouldn't have to print them that large!
I have advocated for printing them to 11 x 17 sheets for the panel shop and assembly drawings and requiring text to be no smaller than 0.125" on a D size sheet. This saves an incredible amount of time in the printing process and are much easier to handle.
Appreciate the input.