TheSwamp

CAD Forums => CAD General => Topic started by: diarmuid on December 09, 2004, 04:07:54 AM

Title: acad 2005 question
Post by: diarmuid on December 09, 2004, 04:07:54 AM
All,

We are moving onto a job and there is talk of doing the drawings in micro station because our mechanical lads use PDMS ( a 3d plant deign platform ) and it is based on microstation.

I have read birefly somewhere that 2005 will open dgn files and save as dgn files.  if this is true, we may not need to go down the retrain for micro station road, INSTEAD, we take the  "we upgrade to 2005 " road.

Well? is it true?

thanks in advance

Diarmuid
Title: acad 2005 question
Post by: Darryl on December 09, 2004, 07:27:09 AM
I cannot say for sure that WON'T work, but I don't think that it will.  In AutoCAD 2005, I checked the SAVEAS dialog box and the EXPORT DATA dialog box and neither of them gave the option of saving the file as type dgn.  Then I searched the help file for "dgn" and "micro station" and nothing was found.  Sorry to disappoint you.
Title: acad 2005 question
Post by: MikePerry on December 09, 2004, 12:06:37 PM
Hi

Autodesk Map 3D (2005) makes such claims -

Map 3D Features (http://usa.autodesk.com/adsk/servlet/index?siteID=123112&id=4009608)

Have a good one, Mike
Title: acad 2005 question
Post by: SPDCad on December 09, 2004, 04:41:11 PM
There are several programmes available to convert Dwg to Dgn and vise verse, just google it and you will see what I mean.

At my previous office we did everything in AutoCAD and had one station setup with MircoStation. When we needed to send out dwg in microstation we imported then into mircostation and save then in the dgn format.  In other words all work was doen in AutoCAD and we used mircostation as a converter.

You could do the same. My old office was quite large and it would cost more to retrain everyone or a few people then it did to buy 1 copy of mircostation.
Title: acad 2005 question
Post by: CADaver on December 09, 2004, 04:55:47 PM
It is MSTA's claim that it can open DWG files seamlessly. Take advantage of that end of it.


Of course having tried it, I cam only assume that they went to Bill Clinton's lawyer for a definition of "seamless"
Title: acad 2005 question
Post by: ronjonp on December 09, 2004, 05:37:31 PM
Quote
Of course having tried it, I cam only assume that they went to Bill Clinton's lawyer for a definition of "seamless"


 :lol:  :lol:

I HEAR THAT!!