Cadtales
TELECOMMUTING
Telecommuting, in a narrow
sense, is the practice of performing computer work at a
remote location while connected to your office network,
system and resources. In a broader sense we might expand
that definition to include activities whereby project files
and resources are obtained or downloaded from client sites,
work is performed, and revised & new files are transmitted
to original and other designated sites electronically. This
broader definition would encompass a great deal of the
consulting, sub-contracting and AEC discipline work being
done today. At CADreps we work with dozens of
companies and thousands of client drawings in just this
manner. Client files may be obtained via email, FTP sites or
delivered on a CD/DVD. Our contribution is added to the
design and the revised files are issued in PDF and ZIP
format for distribution to an FTP site, emailed to clients
and/or their customers, emailed to print houses for
production and recorded on CD/DVDs for archiving all from
the comfort of an office chair.
This topic brings together several
subjects from past Cadtales: Etransmit, Drawing
Integrity, Drawing Management, Drawing Recovery, Linetypes,
Productivity I & II, Redlining and XREFs. For access to
these articles go to
www.hagerman.com
and follow the links to News > Cadtales > Archives. In this
article well designate the person or company in the
"middle" between designers, clients, printers and recipients
as the "telecommuter." This could be a plumbing or
electrical engineer adding their design discipline to an
architects project, a civil engineer applying for a
building permit, or CADreps creating record drawings
at the end of a project.
Process:
As noted in the Cadtales
Productivity article referenced above: There is an important
distinction between being efficient (doing the same
work in less time) and being more effective
designing a process that:
- Insures quality
- Insures on-time delivery
- Eliminates rework
- Insures youre always under budget
- Insures greater customer satisfaction
- Delivers greater than average profits for you and
your clients.
Here is a check list to help
organize telecommuting workflow:
- Obtain all necessary files & references.
- Background files, matching AutoCAD versions,
revision levels & date codes.
- Images, logos & stamps.
- Fonts, AutoCAD shape files and special or custom
linetypes.
- Other specifications and reference documents.
- Permits, approvals & engineering signatures.
- AutoCAD version.
- Use the latest AutoCAD version for sharing &
editing drawings internally.
- AutoCAD files are upward compatible but not
downward compatible.
- Use Etransmit to transmit files as earlier
AutoCAD versions and file types.
- Check drawing integrity on all AutoCAD drawing
files.
- Run Recovery on all DWG and XREF files.
- Record & correct error messages when loading and
running DWG files.
- Preserve the legal status.
- Retain the original title block, logos, stamps
and signatures where applicable.
- Sub-contractors add company name & logo to
original title block.
- Original work: Replace title block with vendor
title block, logo and name.
- Insert original reference work as XREFs to
preserve anothers contribution.
- Use Etransmit for all transmittals.
- Set the AutoCAD version for all transmittals to
this client.
- Etransmit converts primary and all XREF files to
the selected version.
- Set folder structure format for this project.
- Bind XREFs if required.
- Include fonts where applicable.
- Set default printer to NONE or leave as-is.
- Redlining
- Establish clear redlining symbols and protocols.
- Equip and train operators to develop good
redlining techniques.
- Organize & retain all redline and markup
documents, prints, images, PDFs, etc.
- File access and storage.
- CAD manager or supervisor should control access
to all client files.
- CAD manager or supervisor should
authorize/control all transmittals.
- Restrict all file deletions to a qualified
supervisor.
- Avoid saving everything "down" to older AutoCAD
versions.
- Dispose of client materials responsibly.
- Establish a policy for storage and/or disposal
of all client materials.
- Return client materials to client when
requested.
- Dispose of client materials when requested by
shredding or burning.
- Organize & retain originals or copies of work
for dispute resolution.
The most common missing elements
and problems in a design package are:
- XREFs. Missing Xrefs slow or stop meaningful
design work due to missing structure or design elements.
- Fonts. Slows loading and creates unnecessary
irritation. The operator must cancel a dialog box for
every missing font for every DWG and XREF. Missing fonts
may also prevent proper printing of PDFs and paper
prints.
- Logos & Images. Missing images will be absent from
PDF and paper prints. Its OK for internal check prints
but necessary for all other transmittals. Image files
are always an external reference in AutoCAD.
- AutoCAD version. Many contractors are still using
older releases of AutoCAD. Such programs will not open
later version DWG files. Be more effective buy an
upgrade!
Our business and personal worlds
are becoming more virtual everyday. We bank online,
buy personal and business products online and communicate
via email. Now is a good time to extend those features and
more to the daily activities that generate our wealth and
provide our living.
Do you see a productivity, time &
cost reduction and quality benefit in creating a virtual
environment for your design and drafting department?
Call your Hagerman sales representative about AutoCAD
training and customization.
We want you to succeed!