![]() Let’s start at the top and look at terminal behavior and terminal numbering supported by AutoCAD Electrical. How can this be complicated?Īt least seven complicating factors… not to mention the sheer number of terminals that may end up in an electrical controls design. ![]() That’s the physical part and it doesn’t look too complicated…Īnd above, on the electrical schematic, wire coming in, wire coming out, terminal label in the middle. Looks simple enough. Put a number on the little label between the two screws. The above looks simple enough, right? Wire goes in. Hopefully this posting can serve as a simple overview / tutorial of this AutoCAD Electrical feature. The second part (to be posted soon), deals more with the panel layout end of things and focuses on the AutoCAD Electrical “Terminal Strip Editor” tool. This part deals with the “schematic” end of things… inserting and tracking terminal assignments in electrical schematics. This posting is a brief summary of what Nathan covered in the first half of the hour-long webcast. I helped put the demo together and was responsible for real-time Q & A support while Nathan was “on stage”.Īlso thanks to Doug McAlexander for some of the images and samples. ![]() ![]() Autodesk’s Nathan Eliason hosted a webcast earlier this week that focused on AutoCAD Electrical’s ability to insert, track, and manage terminal blocks / terminal strips in a project drawing set. ![]()
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